Coated substrates useful as catalysts and sensors

ABSTRACT

Processes for coating substrates, in particular substrates including shielded surfaces, with tin oxide-containing coatings are disclosed. Such processes comprise contacting a substrate with a tin oxide precursor; preferably maintaining the precursor coated substrate at conditions to distribute and equilibrate the coating; oxidizing the precursor containing material to form a substrate containing tin oxide and contacting the substrate with at least one catalyst material at conditions effective to form a catalyst material containing coating on at least a portion of the substrate. Also disclosed are substrates coated with tin oxide-containing coatings for use in various catalyst applications.

RELATED APPLICATIONS

This application is continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 08/085,680, filed Jul. 1, 1993, now abandoned, which is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 07/770,557, filed Oct. 3, 1991, now abandoned, which is a continuation in part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 07/621,660, filed Dec. 3, 1990, now U.S. Pat. No. 5,204,140, which is a continuation in part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 07/348,789, filed May 8, 1989, now U.S. Pat. No. 5,167,820, which is a continuation in part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 07/348,788, filed May 8, 1989, now U.S. Pat. No. 5,039,845, which is a continuation in part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 07/348,787, filed May 8, 1989, now abandoned, which is a continuation in part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 07/348,786, filed May 8, 1989, now U.S. Pat. No. 5,182,165, which is a continuation in part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 07/272,517, filed Nov. 17, 1988, now abandoned, which is a continuation in part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 07/272,539, filed Nov. 17, 1988, now abandoned, which is a continuation in part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 07/082,277, filed Aug. 6, 1987, now U.S. Pat. No. 4,787,125, which is a divisional of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 06/843,047, filed Mar. 24, 1986, now U.S. Pat. No. 4,713,306. Each of these earlier filed application and the U.S. Patents is incorporated in its entirety herein by reference.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

The present invention relates to a process for coating a substrate. More particularly, the invention relates to coating a substrate with a tin oxide-containing material, preferably an electrically conductive tin oxide-containing material.

An application where substrates with coatings, e.g., electrically conductive coatings, find particular usefulness is in the promotion of chemical reactions, e.g., gas/liquid phase reactions, electro catalytic reactions, photo catalytic reactions, redox reactions, etc. As an example of a type of reaction system, a catalytic, e.g., metallic, component is contacted with the material to be reacted, e.g., hydrocarbon, carbon monoxide is passed through or near to the catalytic component to enhance the chemical reaction, e.g., hydrocarbon, carbon monoxide oxidation to carbon dioxide and water and nitrogen oxide reduction to nitrogen. In addition, using a substrate for the catalytic component which is coated with an electrically conductive material is highly advantageous for electro and photo electro catalysis and/or rapid heat transfer to catalyst surfaces since a field/current can be effectively and efficiently provided to or near the catalytic component for electron transfer reactions. Many types of chemical reactions can be advantageously promoted using such coated substrates. Tin oxide containing coatings on substrates may promote a electron transfer whether or not the chemical reaction is conducted in the presence of a electro photo electro current or field. In addition, tin oxide coated substrates and sintered tin dioxides are useful as gas sensors, and combustion type devices and articles. One or more other components, m e.g., metal components, are often included in certain of these applications.

In many of the above-noted applications it would be advantageous to have an electrically, electronically conductive; electro mechanical tin oxide which is substantially uniform, has high electronic conductivity, and has good chemical properties, e.g., morphology, stability, etc.

A number of techniques may be employed to provide conductive tin oxide coatings on substrates. For example, the chemical vapor deposition (CVD) process may be employed. This process comprises contacting a substrate with a vaporous composition comprising a tin component and a dopant-containing material and contacting the contacted substrate with an oxygen-containing vaporous medium at conditions effective to form the doped tin oxide coating on the substrate. Conventionally, the CVD process occurs simultaneously at high temperatures at very short contact times so that tin oxide is initially deposited on the substrate. However tin oxide can form off the substrate resulting in a low reagent capture rate. The CVD process is well known in the art for coating a single flat surface which is maintained in a fixed position during the above-noted contacting steps. The conventional CVD process is an example of a "line-of-sight" process or a "two dimensional" process in which the tin oxide is formed only on that portion of the substrate directly in the path of the tin source as tin oxide is formed on the substrate. Portions of the substrate, particularly internal surfaces, which are shielded from the tin oxide being formed, e.g., such as pores which extend inwardly from the external surface and substrate layers which are internal at least partially shielded from the depositing tin oxide source by one or more other layers or surfaces closer to the external substrate surface being coated, do not get uniformly coated, if at all, in a "line-of-sight" process. Such shielded substrate portions either are not being contacted by the tin source during line-of-sight processing or are being contacted, if at all, not uniformly by the tin source during line-of-sight processing. A particular problem with "line-of-sight" processes is the need to maintain a fixed distance between the tin source and the substrate. Otherwise, tin dioxide can be deposited or formed off the substrate and lost, with a corresponding loss in process and reagent efficiency.

One of the preferred substrates for use as catalysts including use as a catalyst additive in batteries, such as the positive active material of lead-acid batteries, are inorganic substrates, in particular flakes, spheres, fibers and other type particles. Although the CVD process is useful for coating a single flat surface, for the reasons noted above this process tends to produce non-uniform and/or discontinuous coatings on non-flat, non-equidistant surfaces and/or three dimensional surfaces having inner shielded surfaces and/or the processing is multi-step and/or complex and/or time consuming. Such non uniformities and/or discontinuities and/or processing deficiencies are detrimental to the electrical and chemical properties of the coated substrate. A new process, e.g., a "non-line-of-sight" or "three dimensional" process, useful for coating such substrates would be advantageous. As used herein, a "non-line-of-sight" or "three dimensional" process is a process which coats surfaces of a substrate with tin oxide which surfaces would not be directly exposed to tin oxide-forming compounds being deposited on the external surface of the substrate during the first contacting step and/or to improve the processability to conductive components and articles and/or for the type of substrate to be coated. In other words, a "three dimensional" process coats coatable substrate surfaces which are at least partially shielded by other portions of the substrate which are closer to the external surface of the substrate and/or which are further from the tin oxide forming source during processing, e.g., the internal and/or opposite side surfaces of a glass or ceramic fiber or spheres, or flakes or other shapes or surfaces.

Although a substantial amount of work has been done, there continues to be a need for a new method for coating substrates, particularly three dimensional substrates with tin oxides. The prior art processes described below follow conventional processing techniques such as by sintering of a tin oxide and/or the instantaneous conversion to tin oxide by spray pyrolysis.

For example in "Preparation of Thick Crystalline Films of Tin Oxide and Porous Glass Partially Filled with Tin Oxide," R. G. Bartholomew et al, J. Electrochem, Soc. Vol. 116, No. 9, p 1205 (1969), a method is described for producing films of SnO₂ on a 96% silica glass substrate by oxidation of stannous chloride. The plates of glass are pretreated to remove moisture, and the entire coating process appears to have been done under anhydrous conditions. Specific electrical resistivity values for SnO₂ -porous glass were surprisingly high. In addition, doping with SbCl₃ was attempted, but substantially no improvement, i.e., reduction, in electrical resistivity was observed. Apparently, no effective amount of antimony was incorporated. No other dopant materials were disclosed.

In "Physical Properties of Tin Oxide Films Deposited by Oxidation of SnCl₂," by N. Srinivasa Murty et al, Thin Solid Films, 92 (1982) 347-354, a method for depositing SnO₂ films was disclosed which involved contacting a substrate with a combined vapor of SnCl₂ and oxygen. Although no dopants were used, dopant elements such as antimony and fluorine were postulated as being useful to reduce the electrical resistivity of the SnO₂ films.

This last described method is somewhat similar to the conventional spray pyrolysis technique for coating substrates. In the spray pyrolysis approach tin chloride dissolved in water at low pH is sprayed onto a hot, i.e., on the order of about 600° C., surface in the presence of an oxidizing vapor, e.g., air. The tin chloride is immediately converted, e.g., by hydrolysis and/or oxidation, to SnO₂, which forms a film on the surface. In order to get a sufficient SnO₂ coating on a glass fiber substrate to allow the coated substrate to be useful as a component of a lead-acid battery, on the order of about 20 spraying passes on each side have been required. In other words, it is frequently difficult, if not impossible, with spray pyrolysis to achieve the requisite thickness and uniformity of the tin oxide coating on substrates, in particular three dimensional substrates.

Dislich, et al U.S. Pat. No. 4,229,491 discloses a process for producing cadmium stannate layers on a glass substrate. The process involved dipping the substrate into an alcoholic solution of a reaction product containing cadmium and tin; withdrawing the substrate form the solution in a humid atmosphere; and gradually heating the coated substrate to 650° C. whereby hydrolysis and pyrolysis remove residues from the coated substrate. Dislich, et al is not concerned with coating substrates for lead-acid batteries, let alone the stability required, and is not concerned with maintaining a suitable concentration of a volatile dopant, such as fluoride, in the coating composition during production of the coated substrate.

Pytlewski U.S. Pat. No. 4,229,491 discloses changing the surface characteristics of a substrate surface, e.g., glass pane, by coating the surface with a tin-containing polymer. These polymers, which may contain a second metal such as iron, cobalt, nickel, bismuth, lead, titanium, canadium, chromium, copper, molybdenum, antimony and tungsten, are prepared in the form of a colloidal dispersion of the polymer in water. Pytlewski discloses that such polymers, when coated on glass surfaces, retard soiling. Pytlewski is not concerned with the electrical properties of the polymers or of the coated substrate surfaces.

Gonzalez-Oliver, C. J. R. and Kato, I. in "Sn (Sb)-Oxide Sol-Gel Coatings of Glass," Journal of Non-Crystalline Solids 82 (1986) 400-410 North Holland, Amsterdam, describe a process for applying an electrically conductive coating to glass substrates with solutions containing tin and antimony. This coating is applied by repeatedly dipping the substrate into the solution of repeatedly spraying the solution onto the substrate. After each dipping or spraying, the coated substrate is subjected to elevated temperatures on the order to 550° C.-600° C. to fully condense the most recently applied layer. Other workers, eg., R. Pryane and I. Kato, have disclosed coating glass substrates, such as electrodes, with doped tin oxide materials. The glass substrate is dipped into solution containing organo-metallic compounds of tin and antimony. Although multiple dippings are disclosed, after each dipping the coated substrate is treated at temperatures between 500° C. and 630° C. to finish off the polycondensation reactions, particularly to remove deleterious carbon, as well as to increase the hardness and density of the coating.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

A new process for at least partially coating a substrate with a tin oxide-forming material has been discovered. In brief, the process comprises contacting the substrate with a tin oxide precursor, for example, stannous chloride, in a vaporous form and/or in a liquid form and/or in a solid (e.g., powder) form, to form a tin oxide precursor-containing coating, for example, a stannous chloride-containing coating, on the substrate; preferably contacting the substrate with a fluorine component, i.e., a component containing free fluorine and/or combined fluorine (as in a compound), to form a fluorine component-containing coating on the substrate; and contacting the coated substrate with an oxidizing agent to form a tin oxide-containing, preferably tin dioxide-containing, coating on the substrate. The contacting of the substrate with the tin oxide precursor and with the fluorine component can occur together, i.e., simultaneously, and/or in separate steps.

This process can provide coated substrates which have substantial electrical conductivity so as to be suitable for use as components in batteries, such as lead-acid storage batteries. Substantial coating uniformity, e.g., in the thickness of the tin oxide-containing coating and in the distribution of dopant component in the coating, is obtained. Further, the present fluorine or fluoride doped tin oxide coated substrates have outstanding stability, e.g., in terms of electrical properties and morphology, and are thus useful in various applications. In addition, the process is efficient in utilizing the materials which are employed to form the coated substrate.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION

In one broad aspect, the present coating process comprises contacting a substrate with a composition comprising a tin oxide precursor, such as tin chloride forming components, including stannic chloride, stannous chloride, tin complexes and mixtures thereof, preferably stannous chloride, at conditions, preferably substantially non-deleterious oxidizing conditions, more preferably in a substantially inert environment or atmosphere, effective to form a tin oxide precursor-containing coating, such as a stannous chloride-containing coating, on at least a portion of the substrate. The substrate is preferably also contacted with at least one dopant-forming component, such as at least one fluorine component, at conditions, preferably substantially non-deleterious oxidizing conditions, more preferably in a substantially inert atmosphere, effective to form a dopant-forming component-containing coating, such as a fluorine component-containing coating, on at least a portion of the substrate. This substrate, including one or more coatings containing tin oxide precursor, for example tin chloride and preferably stannous chloride, and preferably a dopant-forming component, for example a fluorine component, is contacted with at least one oxidizing agent at conditions effective to convert the tin oxide precursor to tin oxide and form a tin oxide-containing, preferably tin dioxide-containing, coating, preferably a doped, e.g., fluorine or fluoride doped, tin oxide-containing coating, on at least a portion of the substrate. By "non-deleterious oxidation" is meant that the majority of the oxidation of tin oxide precursor, for example stannous chloride, coated onto the substrate takes place in the oxidizing agent contacting step of the process after distribution and/or equilibration of the precursor, rather than in process step or steps conducted at non-deleterious oxidizing conditions. The process as set forth below will be described in many instances with reference to stannous chloride, which has been found to provide particularly outstanding process and product properties. However, it is to be understood that other suitable tin oxide precursors are included within the scope of the present invention.

The dopant-forming component-containing coating may be applied to the substrate before and/or after and/or during the time the substrate is coated with stannous chloride. In a particularly useful embodiment, the stannous chloride and the dopant-forming component are both present in the same composition used to contact the substrate so that the stannous chloride-containing coating further contains the dopant-forming component. This embodiment provides processing efficiencies since the number of process steps is reduced (relative to separately coating the substrate with stannous chloride and dopant-forming component). In addition, the relative amount of stannous chloride and dopant-forming component used to coat the substrate can be effectively controlled in this "single coating composition" embodiment of the present invention.

In another useful embodiment, the substrate with the stannous chloride-containing coating and the dopant-forming component-containing coating is maintained at conditions, preferably at substantially non-deleterious oxidizing conditions, for example, conditions which reduce and/or minimize the formation of tin oxide on a relatively small portion of the substrate or off the substrate, for a period of time effective to do at least one of the following: (1) coat a larger portion of the substrate with stannous chloride-containing coating; (2) distribute the stannous chloride coating over the substrate; (3) make the stannous chloride-containing coating more uniform in thickness; and (4) distribute the dopant-forming component more uniformly in the stannous chloride-containing coating. Such maintaining preferably occurs for a period of time in the range of about 0.05 or 0.1 minute to about 20 minutes in the presence of an inert gas an/or oxygen i.e. air, under non-deleterious oxidizing conditions. Such maintaining is preferably conducted at the same or a higher temperature relative to the temperature at which the substrate/stannous chloride-containing composition contacting occurs. Such maintaining, in general, acts to make the coating more uniform and, thereby, for example, provides for beneficial electrical conductivity properties. The thickness of the tin oxide-containing coating is preferably in the range of about 0.1 micron to about 10 microns, more preferably about 0.25 micron to about 1.25 microns.

The stannous chloride which is contacted with the substrate is in a vaporous phase or state, or in a liquid phase or state, or in a solid state or phase (powder) at the time of the contacting. The composition which includes the stannous chloride preferably also includes the dopant-forming component or components. This composition may also include one or more other materials, e.g., dopants, catalysts, grain growth inhibitors, solvents, etc., which do not substantially adversely promote the premature hydrolysis and/or oxidation of the stannous chloride and/or the dopant-forming component, and do not substantially adversely affect the properties of the final product, such as by leaving a detrimental residue in the final product prior to the formation of the tin oxide-containing coating. Thus, it has been found to be important, e.g., to obtaining a tin oxide coating with good structural, mechanical and/or electronic properties, that undue hydrolysis of the tin chloride and dopant-forming component be avoided. This is contrary to certain of the prior art which actively utilized the simultaneous hydrolysis reaction as an approach to form the final coating. Examples of useful other materials include organic components such as acetonitrile, ethyl acetate, dimethyl sulfoxide, propylene carbonate and mixtures thereof; certain inorganic salts and mixtures thereof. These other materials, which are preferably substantially anhydrous, may often be considered as a carrier, e.g., solvent, for the tin chloride and/or dopant-forming component to be contacted with the substrate. It has also been found that the substrate can first be contacted with a tin oxide precursor powder, particularly stannous chloride powder, preferably with a film forming amount of such powder, followed by increasing the temperature of the powder to the liquidous point of the powder on the substrate and maintaining the coated substrate for a period of time at conditions including the increased temperature effective to do at least one of the following: (1) coat a larger portion of the substrate with the tin oxide precursor-containing coating; (2) distribute the coating over the substrate; and (3) make the coating more uniform in thickness. Preferably, this step provides for the equilibration of the coating on the substrate. The size distribution of the powder, for example, tin chloride powder, and the amount of such powder applied to the substrate are preferably chosen so as to distribute the coating over substantially the entire substrate.

The tin oxide precursor powder can be applied to the substrate as a powder, particularly in the range of about 5 or about 10 to about 125 microns in average particle size the size in part being a function of the particle size, i.e. smaller particles generally require smaller size powders. The powder is preferably applied as a charged fluidized powder, in particular having a charge opposite that of the substrate or at a temperature where the powder contacts and adheres to the substrate. In carrying out the powder coating, the coating system can be, for example, one or more electrostatic fluidized beds, spray systems having a fluidized chamber, and other means for applying powder, preferably in a film forming amount. The amount of powder used is generally based on the thickness of the desired coating and incidental losses that may occur during processing. The powder process together with conversion to a tin oxide-containing coating can be repeated to achieve desired coating properties, such as desired gradient conductivities.

Typically, the fluidizing gaseous medium is selected to be compatible with the tin oxide precursor powder, i.e., to not substantially adversely affect the formation of a coating on the substrate during melting and ultimate conversion to a tin oxide-containing film.

Generally, gases such as air, nitrogen, argon, helium and the like, can be used, with air being a gas of choice, where no substantial adverse prehydrolysis or oxidation reaction of the powder precursor takes place prior to the oxidation-reaction to the tin oxide coating as previously discussed under equilibration and maintaining. The gas flow rate is typically selected to obtain fluidization and charge transfer to the powder. Fine powders require less gas flow for equivalent deposition. It has been found that small amounts of water vapor enhance charge transfer. The temperature for contacting the substrate with a powder precursor is generally in the range of about 0° C. to about 100° C. or higher, more preferably about 20° C. to about 40° C., and still more preferably about ambient temperature. The substrate however, can be at a temperatures the same as, higher or substantially higher than the powder.

The time for contacting the substrate with precursor powder is generally a function of the substrate bulk density, thickness, powder size and gas flow rate. The particular coating means is selected in part according to the above criteria, particularly the geometry of the substrate. For example, particles, spheres, flakes, short fibers and other similar substrate, can be coated directly in a fluidized bed themselves with such substrates being in a fluidized motion or state. For fabrics, single fibers, rovings and tows a preferred method is to transport the fabric and/or roving directly through a fluidized bed for powder contacting. In the case of rovings and tows, a fiber spreader can be used which exposes the filaments within the fiber bundle to the powder. The powder coating can be adjusted such that all sides of the substrate fabric, roving and the like are contacted with powder. Typical contacting time can vary from seconds to minutes, preferably in the range of about 1 second to about 120 seconds, more preferably about 2 seconds to about 30 seconds.

Typical tin oxide precursor powders are those that are powders at powder/substrate contacting conditions and which are liquidous at the maintaining conditions, preferably equilibration conditions, of the present process. It is preferred that the powder on melting substantially wets the surface of the substrate, preferably having a low contact angle formed by the liquid precursor in contact with the substrate and has a relatively low viscosity and low vapor pressure at the temperature conditions of melting and maintaining, preferably melting within the range of about 100° C. to about 450° C. or higher, more preferably about 250° C. to about 400° C. Typical powder tin oxide precursors are stannous chloride, low molecular weight organic salts or complexes of tin, particularly low molecular weight organic salts and complexes such as stannous acetate and acetylacetonate complexes of tin.

An additional component powder, such as a dopant-forming powder, can be combined with the tin oxide precursor powder. A particularly preferred dopant-forming powder is stannous fluoride. Further, an additional component, such as a dopant, for example a fluorine or fluoride component, indium, or antimony can be incorporated into the coating during the maintaining step, for example hydrogen fluoride gas as a source of fluoride. A combination of the two methods can also be used for additional component incorporation.

The powder tin oxide precursor on melting is maintained and/or equilibrated as set forth above. In addition, temperatures can be adjusted and/or a component introduced into the melting/maintaining step which can aid in altering the precursor for enhanced conversion to tin oxide. For example, gaseous hydrogen chloride can be introduced to form partial or total halide salts and/or the temperature can be adjusted to enhance decomposition of, for example, tin organic salts and/or complexes to more readily oxidizable tin compounds. The dopant can also be present in an oxide or precursor form in the melt as a dispersed preferably as a finely dispersed solid. The oxide can be incorporated advantageously as part of the powder coating of the substrate material.

A fluidizable coated substrate, such as substrates coated directly in a fluid bed of powder, can be subjected to conditions which allow liquidus formation by the tin oxide precursor and coating of the substrate. A particularly preferred process uses a film forming amount of the tin oxide precursor which allows for coating during the liquidus step of the process, and which substantially reduces detrimental substrate agglomeration. The conditions are adjusted or controlled to allow substantially free substrate fluidization and transport under the conditions of temperature and bed density, such as dense bed density to lean bed density. The coated substrate can be further transported to the oxidation step for conversion to tin oxide or converted directly to tin oxide in the same reactor/processing system. A particularly preferred embodiment is the transport of the liquidus coated substrate as a dense bed to a fluidized oxidation zone, such zone being a fluidized zone preferably producing a conversion to tin oxide on the substrate of at least about 80% by weight.

The stannous chloride and/or dopant-forming component to be contacted with the substrate may be present in a molten state. For example, a melt containing molten stannous chloride and/or stannous fluoride and/or other fluoride salt may be used. The molten composition may include one or more other materials, having properties as noted above, to produce a mixture, e.g., a eutectic mixture, having a reduced melting point and/or boiling point. The use of molten stannous chloride and/or dopant-forming component provides advantageous substrate coating while reducing the handling and disposal problems caused by a solvent. In addition, the substrate is very effectively and efficiently coated so that coating material losses are reduced.

The stannous chloride and/or dopant-forming component to be contacted with the substrate may be present in a vaporous and/or atomized state. As used in this context, the term "vaporous state" refers to both a substantially gaseous state and a state in which the stannous chloride and/or dopant-forming component are present as drops or droplets and/or solid dispersion such as colloidal dispersion in a carrier gas, i.e., an atomized state. Liquid state stannous chloride and/or dopant-forming component may be utilized to generate such vaporous state compositions.

In addition to the other materials, as noted above, the composition containing stannous chloride and/or the dopant-forming component may also include one or more grain growth inhibitor components. Such inhibitor component or components are present in an amount effective to inhibit grain growth in the tin oxide-containing coating. Reducing grain growth leads to beneficial coating properties, e.g., higher electrical conductivity, more uniform morphology, and/or greater overall stability. Among useful grain growth inhibitor components are components which include at least one metal, in particular potassium, calcium, magnesium, silicon and mixtures thereof. Of course, such grain growth inhibitor components should have no substantial detrimental effect on the final product.

The dopant-forming component may be deposited on the substrate separately from the stannous chloride, e.g., before and/or during and/or after the stannous chloride/substrate contacting. If the dopant-forming component is deposited on the substrate separately from the stannous chloride, it is preferred that the dopant-forming component, for example, the fluorine component, be deposited after the stannous chloride, such as to form soluble and/or eutectic mixtures and/or dispersions.

Any suitable dopant-forming component may be employed in the present process. Such dopant-forming component should provide sufficient dopant so that the final doped tin oxide coating has the desired properties, e.g., electronic conductivity, stability, etc. Fluorine components are particularly useful dopant-forming components. Care should be exercised in choosing the dopant-forming component or components for use. For example, the dopant-forming component should be sufficiently compatible with the stannous chloride so that the desired doped tin oxide coating can be formed. Dopant-forming components which have excessively high boiling points and/or are excessively volatile (relative to stannous chloride), at the conditions employed in the present process, are not preferred since, for example, the final coating may not be sufficiently doped and/or a relatively large amount of the dopant-forming component or components may be lost during processing. It may be useful to include one or more property altering components, e.g., boiling point depressants, in the composition containing the dopant-forming component to be contacted with the substrate. Such property altering component or components are included in an amount effective to alter one or more properties, e.g., boiling point, of the dopant-forming component, e.g., to improve the compatibility or reduce the incompatibility between the dopant-forming component and stannous chloride.

Particularly useful anion dopants, particularly fluorine components for use in the present invention are selected from stannous fluoride, stannic fluoride, hydrogen fluoride, ammonium fluoride and mixtures thereof. When stannous fluoride is used as a fluorine component, it is preferred to use one or more boiling point depressants to reduce the apparent boiling point of the stannous fluoride, in particular to at least about 850° C. or less. The preferred dopants are those that provide for optimum dopant incorporation while minimizing dopant precursor losses, particularly under the preferred process conditions as set forth therein. In addition oxides or sub-oxides can also be used, including where dopant incorporation is accomplished during the oxidation sintering contacting step.

The use of a fluorine or fluoride dopant is an important feature of certain aspects of the present invention. First, it has been found that fluorine dopants can be effectively and efficiently incorporated into the tin oxide-containing coating. In addition, such fluorine dopants act to provide tin oxide-containing coatings with good electronic properties referred to above, morphology and stability. This is in contrast to certain of the prior art which found antimony dopants to be ineffective to improve the electronic properties of tin oxide coatings in specific applications.

The liquid, e.g., molten, composition which includes stannous chloride may, and preferably does, also include the dopant-forming component. In this embodiment, the dopant-forming component or components are preferably soluble and/or dispersed homogeneously and/or atomized in the composition. Vaporous mixtures of stannous chloride and dopant-forming components may also be used. Such compositions are particularly effective since the amount of dopant in the final doped tin oxide coating can be controlled by controlling the make-up of the composition. In addition, both the stannous chloride and dopant-forming component are deposited on the substrate in one step. Moreover, if stannous fluoride and/or stannic fluoride are used, such fluorine components provide the dopant and are converted to tin oxide during the oxidizing agent/substrate contacting step. This enhances the overall utilization of the coating components in the present process. Particularly useful compositions comprise about 50% to about 98%, more preferably about 70% to about 95%, by weight of stannous chloride and about 2% to about 50%, more preferably about 5% to about 30%, by weight of fluorine component, in particular stannous fluoride.

In one embodiment, a vaporous stannous chloride composition is utilized to contact the substrate, and the composition is at a higher temperature than is the substrate. The make-up of the vaporous stannous chloride-containing composition is such that stannous chloride condensation occurs on the cooler substrate. If the dopant-forming component is present in the composition, it is preferred that such dopant-forming component also condense on the substrate. The amount of condensation can be controlled by controlling the chemical make-up of the vaporous composition and the temperature differential between the composition and the substrate. This "condensation" approach very effectively coats the substrate to the desired coating thickness without requiring that the substrate be subjected to numerous individual or separate contactings with the vaporous stannous chloride-containing composition. As noted above, previous vapor phase coating methods have often been handicapped in requiring that the substrate be repeatedly recontacted in order to get the desired coating thickness. The present "condensation" embodiment reduces or eliminates this problem.

The substrate including the stannous chloride-containing coating and the dopant-forming component-containing coating is contacted with an oxidizing agent at conditions effective to convert stannous chloride to tin oxide, preferably substantially tin dioxide, and form a doped tin oxide coating on at least a portion of the substrate. Water, e.g., in the form of a controlled amount of humidity, is preferably present during the coated substrate/oxidizing agent contacting. This is in contrast with certain prior tin oxide coating methods which are conducted under anhydrous conditions. The presence of water during this contacting has been found to provide a doped tin oxide coating having excellent electrical conductivity properties.

Any suitable oxidizing agent may be employed, provided that such agent functions as described herein. Preferably, the oxidizing agent (or mixtures of such agents) is substantially gaseous at the coated substrate/oxidizing agent contacting conditions. The oxidizing agent preferably includes reducible oxygen, i.e., oxygen which is reduced in oxidation state as a result of the coated substrate/oxidizing agent contacting. More preferably, the oxidizing agent comprises molecular oxygen, either alone or as a component of a gaseous mixture, e.g., air.

The substrate may be composed of any suitable material and may be in any suitable form. Preferably, the substrate is such so as to minimize or substantially eliminate deleterious substrate, coating reactions and/or the migration of ions and other species, if any, from the substrate to the tin oxide-containing coating which are deleterious to the functioning or performance of the coated substrate in a particular application. In addition, it can be precoated to minimize migration, for example an alumina and/or a silica precoat and/or to improve wetability and uniform distribution of the coating materials on the substrate. In order to provide for controlled electrical conductivity in the doped tin oxide coating, it is preferred that the substrate be substantially non-electronically conductive when the coated substrate is to be used as a component of an electric energy storage battery. In one embodiment, the substrate is inorganic, for example glass and/or ceramic. Although the present process may be employed to coat two dimensional substrates, such as substantially flat surfaces, it has particular applicability in coating three dimensional substrates. Thus, the present process provides substantial process advances as a three dimensional process. Examples of three dimensional substrates which can be coated using the present process include spheres, such as having a diameter of from about 1 micron to about 500 microns more preferably from about 10 microns to about 150 microns, extrudates, flakes, single fibers, fiber rovings, chopped fibers, fiber mats, porous substrates, irregularly shaped particles, e.g., catalyst supports, multi-channel monoliths tubes, conduits and the like. Acid resistant inorganic substrate, especially woven and non-woven mats of acid resistant glass fibers, are particularly useful substrates when the doped tin oxide coated substrate is to be used as a component of a battery, such as a lead-acid electrical energy storage battery. More particularly, the substrate for use in a battery is in the form of a body of woven or non-woven fibers, still more particularly, a body of fibers having a porosity in the range of about 60% to about 95%. Porosity is defined as the percent or fraction of void space within a body of fibers. The above-noted porosities are calculated based on the fibers including the desired fluorine doped tin oxide coating.

The substrate for use in lead-acid batteries, because of availability, cost and performance considerations, preferably comprises acid resistant glass, more preferably in the form of fibers, as noted above.

The substrate for use in lead-acid batteries is acid resistant. That is, the substrate exhibits some resistance to corrosion, erosion and/or other forms of deterioration at the conditions present, e.g., at or near the positive plate, or positive side of the bipolar plates, in a lead-acid battery. Although the fluorine doped tin oxide coating does provide a degree of protection for the substrate against these conditions, the substrate should itself have an inherent degree of acid resistance. If the substrate is acid resistant, the physical integrity and electrical effectiveness of the doped tin oxide coating and of the whole present battery element, is better maintained with time relative to a substrate having reduced acid resistance. If glass is used as the substrate, it is preferred that the glass have an increased acid resistance relative to E-glass. Preferably, the acid resistant glass substrate is at least as resistant as is C- or T- glass to the conditions present in a lead-acid battery.

Typical compositions of E-glass and C-glass are as follows:

    ______________________________________                Weight Percent                E-glass   C-glass T-glass     ______________________________________     Silica       54          65      65     Alumina      14          4        6     Calcia       18          14       10*     Magnesia      5          3       --     Soda +         0.5       9       13     Potassium Oxide     Boria         8          5        6     Titania +      0.5       --      --     Iron Oxide     ______________________________________      *including MgO

Preferably the glass contains more than about 60% by weight of silica and less than about 35% by weight of alumina, and alkali and alkaline earth metal oxides.

The conditions at which each of the steps of the present process occur are effective to obtain the desired result from each such step and to provide a substrate coated with a tin oxide-containing coating. The substrate/stannous chloride contacting and the substrate/dopant-forming component contacting preferably occur at a temperature in the range of about 250° C. to about 375° C., more preferably about 275° C. to about 350° C. The amount of time during which stannous chloride and/or dopant-forming component is being deposited on the substrate depends on a number of factors, for example, the desired thickness of the tin oxide-containing coating, the amounts of stannous chloride and dopant-forming component available for substrate contacting, the method by which the stannous chloride and dopant-forming component are contacted with the substrate and the like. Such amount of time is preferably in the range of about 0.5 minutes to about 20 minutes, more preferably about 1 minute to about 10 minutes.

If the coated substrate is maintained in a substantially non-deleterious oxidizing environment, as previously set forth, it is preferred that such maintaining occur at a temperature in the range of about 275° C. to about 375° C., more preferably about 300° C. to about 350° C. for a period of time in the range of about 0.1 minutes to about 20 minutes, more preferably about 1 minute to about 10 minutes. The coated substrate/oxidizing agent contacting preferably occurs at a temperature in the range of about 350° C. to about 600° C., more preferably about 400° C. to about 550° C., for a period of time in the range of about 0.1 minutes to about 10 minutes. A particular advantage of the process of this invention is the temperatures used for oxidation have been found to be lower, in certain cases, significantly lower, i.e., 50° to 100° C. than the temperatures required for spray hydrolysis. This is very significant and unexpected, provides for process efficiencies and reduces, and in some cases substantially eliminates, deleterious reactions and/or migration of deleterious elements from the substrate to the tin oxide layer. Excessive sodium migration, e.g., from the substrate, can reduce electronic conductivity.

The pressure existing or maintained during each of these steps may be independently selected from elevated pressures (relative to atmospheric pressure), atmospheric pressure, and reduced pressures (relative to atmospheric pressure). Slightly reduced pressures, e.g., less than atmospheric pressure and greater than about 8 psia and especially greater than about 11 psia, are preferred.

The tin oxide coated substrate, such as the fluorine doped tin oxide coated substrate, of the present invention may be, for example, a catalyst itself or a component of a composite together with one or more matrix materials. The composites may be such that the matrix material or materials substantially totally encapsulate or surround the coated substrate, or a portion of the coated substrate may extend away from the matrix material or materials.

Any suitable matrix material or materials may be used in a composite with the tin oxide coated substrate. Preferably, the matrix material comprises a polymeric material, e.g., one or more synthetic polymers, more preferably an organic polymeric material. The polymeric material may be either a thermoplastic material or a thermoset material. Among the thermoplastics useful in the present invention are the polyolefins, such as polyethylene, polypropylene, polymethylpentene and mixtures thereof; and poly vinyl polymers, such as polystyrene, polyvinylidene difluoride, combinations of polyphenylene oxide and polystyrene, and mixtures thereof. Among the thermoset polymers useful in the present invention are epoxies, phenol-formaldehyde polymers, polyesters, polyvinyl esters, polyurethanes, melamine-formaldehyde polymers, and urea-formaldehyde polymers.

When used in battery applications, the present doped tin oxide coated substrate is preferably at least partially embedded in a matrix material. The matrix material should be at least initially fluid impervious to be useful in batteries. If the fluorine doped tin oxide coated substrate is to be used as a component in a battery, e.g., a lead-acid electrical energy storage battery, it is situated so that at least a portion of it contacts the positive active electrode material. Any suitable positive active electrode material or combination of materials useful in lead-acid batteries may be employed in the present invention. One particularly useful positive active electrode material comprises electrochemically active lead oxide, e.g., lead dioxide, material. A paste of this material is often used. If a paste is used in the present invention, it is applied so that there is appropriate contacting between the fluorine doped tin oxide coated substrate and the paste.

In order to provide enhanced bonding between the tin oxide coated substrate and the matrix material, it has been found that the preferred matrix materials have an increased polarity, as indicated by an increased dipole moment, relative to the polarity of polypropylene. Because of weight and strength considerations, if the matrix material is to be a thermoplastic polymer, it is preferred that the matrix be a polypropylene-based polymer which includes one or more groups effective to increase the polarity of the polymer relative to polypropylene. Additive or additional monomers, such as maleic anhydride, vinyl acetate, acrylic acid, and the like and mixtures thereof, may be included prior to propylene polymerization to give the product propylene-based polymer increased polarity. Hydroxyl groups may also be included in a limited amount, using conventional techniques, to increase the polarity of the final propylene-based polymer.

Thermoset polymers which have increased polarity relative to polypropylene are more preferred for use as the present matrix material. Particularly preferred thermoset polymers include epoxies, phenol-formaldehyde polymers, polyesters, and polyvinyl esters.

A more complete discussion of the presently useful matrix materials is presented in Fitzgerald, et al U.S. Pat. No. 4,708,918, the entire disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference herein.

Various techniques, such as casting, molding and the like, may be used to at least partially encapsulate or embed the tin oxide coated substrate into the matrix material or materials and form composites. The choice of technique may depend, for example, on the type of matrix material used, the type and form of the substrate used and the specific application involved. Certain of these techniques are presented in U.S. Pat. No. 4,547,443, the entire disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference herein. One particular embodiment involves pre-impregnating (or combining) that portion of the tin oxide coated substrate to be embedded in the matrix material with a relatively polar (increased polarity relative to polypropylene) thermoplastic polymer, such as polyvinylidene difluoride, prior to the coated substrate being embedded in the matrix material. This embodiment is particularly useful when the matrix material is itself a thermoplastic polymer, such as modified polypropylene, and has been found to provide improved bonding between the tin oxide coated substrate and the matrix material.

The bonding between the matrix material and the fluorine doped tin oxide coated, acid-resistant substrate is important to provide effective battery operation. In order to provide for improved bonding of the fluorine doped tin oxide coating (on the substrate) with the matrix material, it is preferred to at least partially, more preferably substantially totally, coat the fluorine doped tin oxide coated substrate with a coupling agent which acts to improve the bonding of the fluorine doped tin oxide coating with the matrix. This is particularly useful when the substrate comprises acid resistant glass fibers. Any suitable coupling agent may be employed. Such agents preferably comprise molecules which have both a polar portion and a non-polar portion. Certain materials generally in use as sizing for glass fibers may be used here as a "size" for the doped tin oxide coated glass fibers. The amount of coupling agent used to coat the fluorine doped tin oxide coated glass fibers should be effective to provide the improved bonding noted above and, preferably, is substantially the same as is used to size bare glass fibers. Preferably, the coupling agent is selected from the group consisting of silanes, silane derivatives, stannates, stannate derivatives, titanates, titanate derivatives and mixtures thereof. U.S. Pat. No. 4,154,638 discloses one silane-based coupling agent adapted for use with tin oxide surfaces. The entire disclosure of this patent is hereby expressly incorporated by reference herein.

In the embodiment in which the fluorine doped tin oxide coated substrate is used as a component of a bipolar plate in a lead-acid battery, it is preferred to include a fluid-impervious conductive layer that is resistant to reduction adjacent to, and preferably in electrical communication with, the second surface of the matrix material. The conductive layer is preferably selected from metal, more preferably lead, and substantially non-conductive polymers, more preferably synthetic polymers, containing conductive material. The non-conductive polymers may be chosen from the polymers discussed previously as matrix materials. One particular embodiment involves using the same polymer in the matrix material and in the conductive layer. The electrically conductive material contained in the non-conductive layer preferably is selected from the group consisting of graphite, lead and mixtures thereof.

In the bipolar plate configuration, a negative active electrode layer located to, and preferably in electric communication with, the fluid impervious conductive layer is included. Any suitable negative active electrode material useful in lead-acid batteries may be employed. One particularly useful negative active electrode material comprises lead, e.g., sponge lead. Lead paste is often used.

In yet another embodiment, a coated substrate including tin oxide, preferably electronically conductive tin oxide, and at least one additional catalyst component in an amount effective to promote a chemical reaction is formed. Preferably, the additional catalyst component is a metal and/or a component of a metal effective to promote the chemical reaction. The promoting effect of the catalyst component may be enhanced by the presence of an electrical field or electrical current in proximity to the component. Thus, the tin oxide, preferably on a substantially non-electronically conductive substrate, e.g., a catalyst support, can provide an effective and efficient catalyst for chemical reactions, including those which occur or are enhanced when an electric field or current is applied in proximity to the catalyst component. Thus, it has been found that the present coated substrates are useful as active catalysts and supports for additional catalytic components. Without wishing to limit the invention to any particular theory of operation, it is believed that the outstanding stability, e.g., with respect to electronic properties and/or morphology and/or stability, of the present tin oxides plays an important role in making useful and effective catalyst materials, particularly the higher surface area attainable tin oxide materials prepared in accordance with this invention, especially when compared to prior art processes which produce very low surface areas. Any chemical reaction, including a chemical reaction the rate of which is enhanced by the presence of an electrical field or electrical current as described herein, may be promoted using the present catalyst component tin oxide-containing coated substrates. A particularly useful class of chemical reactions are those involving chemical oxidation or reduction. For example, an especially useful and novel chemical reduction includes the chemical reduction of nitrogen oxides, to minimize air pollution, with a reducing gas such as carbon monoxide, hydrogen and mixtures thereof and/or an electron transferring electrical field. A particularly useful chemical oxidation application is a combustion, particularly catalytic combustion, wherein the oxidizable compounds, i.e., carbon monoxide and hydrocarbons are combusted to carbon dioxide and water. For example, catalytic converters are used for the control of exhaust gases from internal combustion engines and are used to reduce carbon monoxide and hydrocarbons from such engines. Of course, other chemical reactions, e.g., hydrocarbon reforming, dehydrogenation, such as alkylaromatics to olefins and olefins to dienes, hydrodecyclization, isomerization, ammoxidation, such as with olefins, aldol condensations using aldehydes and carboxylic acids and the like, may be promoted using the present catalyst component, tin oxide-containing coated substrates. As noted above, it is preferred that the tin oxide in the catalyst component, tin oxide-containing substrates be electronically conductive. Although fluorine doped tin oxide is particularly useful, other dopants may be incorporated in the present catalyst materials to provide the tin oxide with the desired electronic properties. For example, antimony may be employed as a tin oxide dopant. Such other dopants may be incorporated into the final catalyst component, tin oxide-containing coated substrates using one or more processing techniques substantially analogous to procedures useful to incorporate fluorine dopant, e.g., as described herein.

Particularly useful chemical reactions as set forth above include the oxidative dehydrogenation of ethylbenzene to styrene and 1-butene to 1,3-butadiene; the ammoxidation of propylene to acrylonitrile; aldol condensation reactions for the production of unsaturated acids, i.e., formaldehyde and propionic acid to form methacrylic acid and formaldehyde and acetic acid to form acrylic acid; the isomerization of butenes; and the oxidation of methane to methanol. It is believed, without limiting the invention to any specific theory of operation, that the stability of the catalysts, the redox activity of the tin oxide, i.e., stannous, stannic, mixed tin oxide redox couple, morphology and the tin oxide catalytic and/or support interaction with other catalytic species provides for the making of useful and effective catalyst materials. In certain catalytic reactions, such as NO_(x) reduction and oxidative dehydrogenation, it is believed that lattice oxygen from the regenerable tin oxide redox couple participates in the reactions.

The tin oxide-containing coated substrates of the present invention may be employed alone or as a catalyst and/or support in a sensor, in particular gas sensors. Preferably, the coated substrates includes a sensing component similar to the catalyst component, as described herein. The present sensors are useful to sense the presence or concentration of a component, e.g., a gaseous component, of interest in a medium, for example, hydrogen, carbon monoxide, methane and other alkanes, alcohols, aromatics, e.g., benzene, water, etc., e.g., by providing a signal in response to the presence or concentration of a component of interest, e.g., a gas of interest, in a medium. Such sensors are also useful where the signal provided is enhanced by the presence of an electrical field or current in proximity to the sensing component. The sensing component is preferably one or more metals or metallic containing sensing components, for example, platinum, palladium, silver and zinc. The signal provided may be the result of the component of interest itself impacting the sensing component and/or it may be the result of the component of interest being chemically reacted, e.g., oxidized or reduced, in the presence of the sensing component.

The stability and durability for the present tin oxide materials are believed to make them very useful as catalysts, sensors, and supports for additional catalysts and sensors in aggressive and/or harsh environments, particularly acid, i.e., sulfur and nitrogen acid environments.

Any suitable catalyst component (or sensing component) may be employed, provided that it functions as described herein. Among the useful metal catalytic components and metal sensing components are those selected from components of the transition metals, the rare earth metals, certain other catalytic components and mixtures thereof, in particular catalysts containing gold, silver, copper, vanadium, chromium, cobalt molybdenum, tungsten, zinc, indium, the platinum group metals, i.e., platinum, palladium and rhodium, iron, nickel, manganese, cesium, titanium, etc. Although metal containing compounds may be employed, it is preferred that the metal catalyst component (and/or metal sensing component) included with the coated substrate comprise elemental metal and/or metal in one or more active oxidized forms, for example, Cr₂ O₃, Ag₂ O, etc.

The preferred support materials include a wide variety of materials used to support catalytic species, particularly porous refractory inorganic oxides. These supports include, for example, alumina, silica, zirconia, magnesia, boria, phosphate, titania, ceria, thoria and the like, as well as multi-oxide type supports such as alumina-phosphorous oxide, silica alumina, zeolite modified inorganic oxides, e.g., silica alumina, and the like. As set forth above, support materials can be in many forms and shapes, especially porous shapes which are not flat surfaces, i.e., non line-of-site materials. A particularly useful catalyst support is a multi-channel monolith such as one made from cordierite which has been coated with alumina. The catalyst materials can be used as is or further processed such as by sintering of powered catalyst materials into larger aggregates. The aggregates can incorporate other powders, for example, other oxides, to form the aggregates.

As set forth above, the multi-channel monoliths are particularly useful as catalyst supports. The monolithic support is composed of many parallel channels. The channels may be circular, hexagonal, square, triangular or sinusoidal. The inside edge length of the channels and their wall thickness can be controlled during the fabrication, along with the cell geometry. These factors determine the cell density and void fraction of the monolith, as well as the geometric surface area and hydraulic diameter of the monoliths. The external geometry of the monolith support is usually determined by the use. Particularly useful applications are the reduction of nitrogen oxide from combustion sources, i.e., power generation and nitric acid plants and the reduction of hydrocarbon and carbon monoxide emissions from combustion sources, including gas turbine and internal combustion engine and their use in both stationary and mobile applications. The lengths of the channels typically range from 1 centimeter to 1 meter and monoliths with diameters up to 2 meters have been formed. The external geometry of the monolith can vary and typically includes geometrical shapes, i.e., circular, square and oval. The geometric shape can be defined by its length, width, height coordinates and such coordinates can have dimensions generally from about 3 centimeter to about 130 centimeters, more preferably, from about 5 centimeters to about 60 centimeters. The geometric shape is generally selected according to the requirements for the particular process in which the monolith is to be used. While the cell density and/or wall thickness can have a great number of variations, the manufacturing methods, presently used to produce monoliths generally have minimum wall thickness of about 0.1 mm and cell density of less than 160 cells per centimeter square. Typical wall thicknesses are from about 0.15 mm to about 1.0 mm more preferably from about 0.2 mm to about 0.6 mm. Typical cell densities are from about 15 cells per square cm to about 65 cells per square cm, more preferably from about 20 cells per square cm to about 50 cells per square cm.

The microstructure or phase distribution of the walls of a monolith support are important in determining its physical properties. The arrangements and size of the crystal and glass phases, the pore structure and the chemical composition, all determine the thermal expansion, thermal conductivity, strength, melting point, surface area and other important physical properties. The microstructure of the final product depends on the raw material fabrication techniques, sintering temperatures and time, as well as phase equilibrium, kinetics of phase changes and grain growth.

An important physical property of monoliths is the degree of porosity. Porosity is controlled by the methods of fabrication, starting material and final sintering time and temperatures. The amount of porosity, i.e., the percentage of open space in the total volume, generally is from about 10% to about 65%, preferably from about 30% to about 55%. The amount of porosity, particularly the shape and size distribution of the wall porosity, affects such properties as density, thermal conductivity and subsequent coat adhesion. Typically the average pore diameter is in the range of from about 1 to about 10 microns. It is generally important that a large fraction of the porosity have relatively large pores, for example from about 5 to about 15 microns, to obtain good adhesion of a subsequent surface coat on the monolith. An important property determined by porosity, particularly for high porosities, is the significant reduction in thermal conductivity of the monolith, particularly the monolith walls, in both heat flow parallel to cells as well as heat flow perpendicular to cells. The magnitude of reduction in thermal conductivity can be optimized and typically can be a reduction of about 50%, up to 80%, or even up to 90% or higher when compared to the solid non-porous inorganic support. As set forth above, thermal conductivity can be optimized for low thermal conductivity by the selection of ceramic starting materials, porosity forming components and concentration and geometry. Such optimization also takes into consideration the final end use application of the catalyst supported monolith. Porosity can also be increased by directly leeching the preformed monolith within an acid medium, i.e. nitric acid, to selectively remove ceramic constituents for example magnesia and alumina. Such leaching cannot only increase porosity but also the surface area of the monolith. Typical substrate surface areas can range from about 0.1 to about 2 meters square per gram up to about 20 or even up to about 40 or higher meters square per gram, with the higher areas generally resulting from leached and/or was coated monoliths.

It is generally preferred to have a high surface area in order to optimize catalyst activity for a particular catalyzed chemical reaction. As set forth above, the monolith surface area can be increased by, for example, leaching and/or by the application of a surface coating such as a wash-coat which provides for a high surface area surface on the monolith. It is preferred to incorporate the catalyst on a high surface area for improved overall catalyst effectiveness and activity. As set forth above, it is preferred to have macro pores when a subsequent surface coat is being applied to the monolith. Such subsequent coatings can include, for example, a barrier coat, a wash coat, and/or the tin oxide coating on the substrate surface.

As set forth above, the inorganic substrates, can include a wide variety of materials. Particularly preferred inorganic oxides for use in the manufacture of monoliths are for example, cordierite, silicon carbide, silicon nitride, titania (such as anatase), alumina (preferably gamma alumina), titania and silica, magnesium aluminate spinel, mordenite, i.e., zeolite, silica, magnesia and mixtures thereof. The inorganic substrates, particularly the inorganic oxide monolith supports are particularly useful and can be coated with a tin oxide forming component and converted to a tin oxide.

For the coating of monoliths, the various processes set forth above can be utilized. For example, a monolith support of suitable width, length and cell density can be contacted with a tin oxide precursor powder, a powder solvent slurry and/or by vapor infiltration, including mist and droplets, preferably stannous chloride. The monolith after contacting with the tin oxide precursor containing compound is preferably equilibrated and maintained at conditions, sufficient to allow distribution of the tin oxide precursor forming compound over a plurality of the surfaces, particularly the internal cell, i.e., channel surfaces of the monolith. The monolith before, during or after equilibration can be contacted with a substantially non-deleterious gas, preferably inert, in order to minimize and/or reduce any blockage in the cells of the monolith. The viscosity of the precursor liquid can be adjusted to control depth of penetration into the monolith, particularly into the macro pores. As set forth above, a dopant can be incorporated into the tin oxide forming component coating during the above processing steps. A particularly preferred tin oxide forming component is stannous chloride and a particularly preferred dopant is fluoride. The monolith after coating with the tin oxide precursor compound can be subjected to oxidation conditions to convert the precursor compound to tin oxide. Particularly preferred tin oxide coatings are conductive tin oxide coatings.

The catalyst components (or sensing components) may be included with the coated substrate using any one or more of various techniques, e.g., conventional and well known techniques. For example, metal catalyst components (metal sensing components) can be included with the coated substrate by impregnation; electrochemical deposition; spray hydrolysis; deposition from a molten salt mixture; thermal decomposition of a metal compound or the like. The amount of catalyst component (or sensing component) included is sufficient to perform the desired catalytic (or sensing function), respectively, and varies from application to application. In one embodiment, the catalyst component (or sensing component) is incorporated while the tin oxide forming component is placed on the substrate. Thus, a catalyst material, such as a salt or acid, e.g., a halide and preferably chloride, oxy chloride and chloro acids, e.g., chloro platinic acid, of the catalytic metal, is incorporated into the stannous chloride-containing coating of the substrate, prior to contact with the oxidizing agent, as described herein. This catalyst material can be combined with the stannous chloride and contacted with the substrate, or it may be contacted with the substrate separately from stannous chloride before, during and/or after the stannous chloride/substrate contacting.

One approach is to incorporate catalyst-forming materials into a process step used to form a tin oxide coating. This minimizes the number of process steps but also, in certain cases, produces more effective catalysts. The choice of approach, however, is dependent on a number of factors, including the process compatibility of tin oxide and catalyst-forming materials under given process conditions and the overall process efficiency and catalyst effectiveness.

The catalyst support and/or tin oxide coated support can be coated with a material, such as a high surface area forming material, for example a wash coat in order to increase surface area. It is preferred to form a high surface area prior to incorporating the active catalyst material. Various conventional and well known techniques for catalyst incorporation can be used.

As in known in the art, most particulate supports can be made directly with high surface areas, however, monoliths, as set forth above, can have low surface areas, i.e., about 0.1 to about 2 meter square per gram. Such surface areas are less than optimized for catalytic activity. In order to increase surface area, particularly for monoliths, the support can be coated with a high surface area material, such as an oxide forming material, particularly gamma alumina.

The thickness of the wash coat is generally less than about 0.1 mm. More typically, less than about 0.05 mm on the basis of overall average thickness. The coating generally comprises macro pores in the range of about 2 to about 10 microns and meso pores of from about 100 to about 200 angstroms. The type of distribution of pore size is generally referred to as a bimodal pore distribution.

As set forth above, the catalyst support can be coated with materials to provide and/or enhance a particular property. In addition to surface area, coatings can also incorporate an active catalyst component. For example, zeolites can be coated on the surface of the catalyst support, using for example a silica binder generally in the range from about 10 to 40 wt. % binder, more preferably from about 20 to about 30 wt. % binder. The concentration of binder is selected to maximize the availability of zeolite sites and to preserve the integrity of the coating.

A wide variety of materials, for example, inorganic oxides, can be used in the manufacture of monoliths. As set forth above, it is preferred to reduce deleterious interactions between the substrate and the tin oxide coating on the substrate, i.e., a deleterious interaction which substantially reduces the conductivity and/or catalyst activity and/or activity maintenance for the particular application. In addition, it is preferred to reduce deleterious interactions between non-tin oxide coatings with the active catalyst component where such additional coatings are utilized in the preparation of the catalyst.

As set forth above, the monolith can be contacted with a tin oxide precursor, utilizing for example powder, slurry, vapor infiltration and the like, process to produce a coated substrate. In a preferred embodiment, the tin oxide precursor is converted to tin oxide followed by incorporation of the catalyst component. The catalyst component can be incorporated directly on the tin oxide surface and/or a coating such as a high surface area coating, can be applied to the tin oxide surface coating, prior to incorporation of the active catalyst component. In general, it is preferred to have a high surface area available for catalyst incorporation and dispersion, particularly for high activity catalysts used in high gas velocity type conversion processes. The selection of a coating such as a coating on the tin oxide surface, is in part a function of the chemical process, the chemical processing conditions, to which the catalyst surface is exposed. For example, deleterious reactions between the catalyst and/or coating, i.e., the formation of low temperature spinels, from the catalyst component and for example alumina component can reduce significantly both catalyst activity and activity maintenance. Such coatings are selected to reduce such deleterious interactions between the catalyst and coating and/or tin oxide surface. However, certain catalyst coating interactions, enhance catalyst activity conversion and activity maintenance. Such interactions are generally referred to as catalyst support interactions and/or strong catalyst support interactions. Catalyst components, coatings, including tin oxide coating, can be selected to enhance such catalyst support interactions.

As set forth above, the support including monoliths can be coated with a barrier type coating, prior to contacting with a tin oxide precursor and subsequent conversion to a tin oxide coating on the monolith. The barrier coat can reduce substantial deleterious substrate/tin oxide interaction, as well as, providing a definable surface, generally from a porosity stand point, to control and/or regulate the quantity of tin oxide precursor used to obtain a design average coating thickness, including reduced penetration into the pores of the monolith. In addition, a coating can be formed on the tin oxide surface to provide for improved catalyst performance, i.e., higher surface area, more effective dispersion of catalyst, interactions between the coating and catalyst which improves catalysts performance, i.e., catalyst coating interactions which improve catalyst performance and/or reduce deleterious interactions which substantially reduce overall catalyst performance. As set forth above, the tin oxide and added catalyst metal can be formed with or without the use of a coating on the tin oxide surface, with the use of a subsequent coating, i.e, a high surface area coating being a preferred approach to incorporate catalyst forming materials. The tin oxide coating, catalyst combinations, as set forth above, are preferred catalyst products of the present invention.

As set forth above, the tin oxide substrate can be contacted with the catalyst forming material to incorporate the catalyst material after the conversion of the tin oxide precursor to tin oxide. As set forth above, various techniques, e.g., conventional and well known techniques can be utilized, i.e., impregnation and deposition from salt mixtures. For example, the tungsten and molybdenum can be incorporated as a catalyst by impregnation using ammonium salts dissolved in base. In addition, vanadium, i.e., ammonium vanadate dissolved in for example, a poly functional acid such as oxalic acid can be used. Metals such as cobalt, nickel, iron and copper can be impregnated as a nitrate solution. The impregnated supports are typically dried and sintered at elevated temperature for a time sufficient to decompose the salt to the corresponding oxide. Conventional and well known techniques can be utilized for metals such as the incorporation of precious metals as catalyst. As set forth above, a preferred impregnation technique for precious metal particularly, platinum is the use of chloro platinic acid. The impregnation or other techniques to incorporate a catalyst material after the formation of the tin oxide coating, is particularly preferred when the substrate is a multi-channel monolith.

The tin oxide substrate products of this invention where such substrate is a monolith, find particular utility as catalytic combusters, catalytic converters, particularly for combustion turbines and internal combustion engines and for nitrogen oxides reduction. A particularly preferred ceramic material contains cordierite preferably comprising a major amount of the monolith. Cordierite has been found to be particularly useful as a catalytic converter when combined with tin oxide and catalytic amounts of platinum, palladium, rhodium and mixtures thereof. Particularly preferred catalytic converters are such cordierite monoliths with a conductive tin oxide coating, a high surface area gama-alumina coating and catalytic effective amounts of platinum and/or palladium and/or rhodium.

In addition to catalytic and combustion converters, the catalyst products of this invention find particularly utility in the reduction of nitrogen oxide, particularly from coal, oil, or gas fired stationary combustion sources. A particularly preferred substrate material in the form of a monolith is a titania based and/or containing substrate material, including mixtures of titania with other ceramic based materials, particularly inorganic oxides. Particularly preferred catalyst materials include vanadium, cobalt, copper, nickel, molybdenum, chromium, iron, and mixtures thereof. A particularly preferred catalyst material is vanadium and combinations of vanadium with chromium, and/or iron and/or molybdenum.

The tin oxide/substrate combinations, e.g., the tin oxide coated substrates, of the present invention are useful in other applications as well. Among these other applications are included porous membranes, resistance heating elements, electrostatic dissipation elements, electromagnetic interference shielding elements, protective coatings and the like.

In one embodiment, a porous membrane is provided which comprises a porous substrate, preferably an inorganic substrate, and a tin oxide-containing material in contact with at least a portion of the porous substrate. In another embodiment, the porous membrane comprises a porous organic matrix material, e.g., a porous polymeric matrix material, and a tin oxide-containing material in contact with at least a portion of the porous organic matrix material. With the organic matrix material, the tin oxide-containing material may be present in the form of an inorganic substrate, porous or substantially non porous, having a tin oxide-containing coating, e.g., an electronically conductive tin oxide-containing coating, thereon.

One particularly useful feature of the present porous membranes is the ability to control the amount of tin oxide present to provide for enhanced performance in a specific application, e.g., a specific contacting process. For example, the thickness of the tin oxide-containing coating can be controlled to provide such enhanced performance. The coating process of the present invention is particularly advantageous in providing such controlled coating thickness. Also, the thickness of the tin oxide-containing coating can be varied, e.g., over different areas of the same porous membrane, such as an asymmetric porous membrane. In fact, the thickness of this coating can effect the size, e.g., diameter, of the pores. The size of the pores of the membrane or porous substrate may vary inversely with the thickness of the coating. The coating process of the present invention is particularly useful in providing this porosity control.

A heating element, for example, a resistance heating element, is provided which comprises a three dimensional substrate having an electrically or electronically conductive tin oxide-containing coating on at least a portion of all three dimensions thereof. The coated substrate is adapted and structured to provide heat in response, that is, in direct or indirect response, to the presence or application of one or more force fields, for example, magnetic fields, electrical fields or potentials, combinations of such force fields and the like, therein or thereto. An example of such a heating element is one which is adapted and structured to provide heat upon the application of an electrical potential across the coated substrate. Heating elements which are adapted and structured to provide heat in response to the presence of one or more electrical currents and/or electrical fields and/or magnetic fields therein are included in the scope of the present invention. The heat may be generated resistively. In one embodiment, a flexible heating element is provided which comprises a flexible matrix material, e.g., an organic polymeric material in contact with a substrate having an electronically conductive tin oxide-containing coating on at least a portion thereof. The coated substrate is adapted and structured as described above.

In addition, an electrostatic dissipation/electromagnetic interference shielding element is provided which comprises a three dimensional substrate, e.g., an inorganic substrate, having an electronically conductive tin oxide-containing coating on at least a portion of all three dimensions thereof. The coated substrate is adapted and structured to provide at least one of the following: electrostatic dissipation and electromagnetic interference shielding.

A very useful application for the products of this invention is for static, for example, electrostatic, dissipation and shielding, particularly for ceramic and polymeric parts, and more particularly as a means for effecting static dissipation including controlled static charge and dissipation such as used in certain electro static painting processes and/or electric field absorption in parts, such as parts made of ceramics and polymers and the like, as described herein. The present products can be incorporated directly into the polymer or ceramic and/or a carrier such as a cured or uncured polymer based carrier or other liquid, as for example in the form of a liquid, paste, hot melt, film and the like. These product/carrier based materials can be directly applied to parts to be treated to improve overall performance effectiveness. A heating cycle is generally used to provide for product bonding to the parts. A particular unexpected advantage is the improved mechanical properties, especially compared to metallic additives which may compromise mechanical properties. In addition, the products of this invention can be used in molding processes to allow for enhanced static dissipation and/or shielding properties of polymeric resins relative to an article or device or part without such product or products, and/or to have a preferential distribution of the product or products at the surface of the part for greater volume effectiveness within the part.

The particular form of the products, i.e., fibers, flakes, particles, mats or the like, is chosen based upon the particular requirements of the part and its application, with one or more of flakes, fibers and particles, including spheres, being preferred for polymeric parts. In general, it is preferred that the products of the invention have a largest dimension, for example, the length of fiber or particle or side of a flake, of less than about 1/8 inch, more preferably less than about 1/64 inch and still more preferably less than about 1/128 inch. It is preferred that the ratio of the longest dimension, for example, length, side or diameter, to the shortest dimension of the products of the present invention be in the range of about 500 to 1 to about 10 to 1, more preferably about 250 to 1 to about 25 to 1. The concentration of such product or products in the product/carrier and/or mix is preferably less than about 60 weight %, more preferably less than about 40 weight %, and still more preferably less than about 20 weight %. A particularly useful concentration is that which provides the desired performance while minimizing the concentration of product in the final article, device or part.

The products of this invention find particular advantage in static dissipation parts, for example, parts having a surface resistivity in the range of about 10⁴ ohms/square to about 10¹² ohms/square. In addition, those parts generally requiring shielding to a surface resistivity in the range of about 1 ohm/square to about 10⁵ ohms/square and higher find a significant advantage for the above products due to their mechanical properties and overall improved polymer compatibility, for example, matrix bonding properties as compared to difficult to bond metal and carbon-based materials. A further advantage of the above products is their ability to provide static dissipation and/or shielding in adverse environments such as in corrosive water and/or electro galvanic environments. As noted above, the products have the ability to absorb as well as to reflect electro fields. The unique ability of the products to absorb allows parts to be designed which can minimize the amount of reflected electro fields that is given off by the part. This latter property is particularly important where the reflected fields can adversely affect performance of the part.

A flexible electrostatic dissipation/electromagnetic interference shielding element is also included in the scope of the present invention. This flexible element comprises a flexible matrix material, e.g., an organic polymeric material, in contact with a substrate having an electronically conductive tin oxide-containing coating on at least a portion thereof. The coated substrate of this flexible element is adapted and structured as described above.

The present coating process is particularly suitable for controlling the composition and structure of the coating on the substrate to enhance the performance of the coated substrate in a given, specific application, e.g., a specific resistance heating electrostatic dissipation or electromagnetic interference shielding application.

The present tin oxide/substrate combinations and matrix material/tin oxide/substrate combinations, which have at least some degree of porosity, hereinafter referred to as "porous contacting membranes" or "porous membranes", may be employed as active components and/or as supports for active components in systems in which the tin oxide/substrate, e.g., the tin oxide coated substrate, is contacted with one or more other components such as in, for example, separation systems, gas purification systems, filter medium systems, flocculent systems and other systems in which the stability and durability of such combinations can be advantageously utilized.

Particular applications which combine many of the outstanding properties of the products of the present invention include porous and electro membrane separations for gas processing, food processing, textile/leather processing, chemical processing, bio medical processing and water treatment. For example, various types of solutions can be further concentrated, e.g., latex concentrated, proteins isolated, colloids removed, salts removed, etc. The membranes can be used in flat plate, tubular and/or spiral wound system design. In addition, the products of this invention can be used e.g., as polymeric composites, for electromagnetic and electrostatic interference shielding applications used for computers, telecommunications and electronic assemblies, as well as in low radar observable systems and static dissipation, for example, in carpeting and in lightening protection systems for aircraft.

Membranes containing voids that are large in comparison with molecular dimensions are considered porous. In these porous membranes, the pores are interconnected, and the membrane may comprise only a few percent of the total volume. Transport, whether driven by pressure, concentration, or electrical potential or field, occurs within these pores. Many of the transport characteristics of porous membranes are determined by the pore structure, with selectivity being governed primarily by the relative size of the molecules or particles involved in a particular application compared to the membrane pores. Mechanical properties and chemical resistance are greatly affected by the nature, composition and structure e.g., chemical composition and physical state, of the membrane.

Commercial micropore membranes have pore dimensions, e.g., diameters, in the range of about 0.005 micron to about 20 microns. They are made from a wide variety of materials in order to provide a range of chemical and solvent resistances. Some are fiber or fabric reinforced to obtain the required mechanical rigidity and strength. The operational characteristics of the membrane are defined sometimes in terms of the molecules or particles that will pass through the membrane pore structure.

Microporous membranes are often used as filters. Those with relatively large pores are used in separating coarse disperse, suspended substances, such as particulate contamination. Membranes with smaller pores are used for sterile filtration of gases, separation of aerosols, and sterile filtration of pharmaceutical, biological, and heat sensitive solutions. The very finest membranes may be used to separate, e.g., purify, soluble macromolecular compounds.

Porous membranes also are used in dialysis applications such a removing waste from human blood (hemodialysis), for separation of biopolymers, e.g., with molecular weights in the range of about 10,000 to about 100,000, and for the analytical measurements of polymer molecular weights. Microporous membranes also may be used as supports for very thin, dense skins or a containers for liquid membranes.

The ability of dense membranes to transport species selectively makes possible molecular separation processes such as desalination of water or gas purification, but with normal thicknesses these rates are extremely slow. In principle, the membranes could be made thin enough that the rates would be attractive, but such thin membranes would be very difficult to form and to handle, and they would have difficulty supporting the stresses imposed by the application. Conversely, microporous membranes have high transport rates but very poor selectivity for small molecules. Asymmetric membranes, for example made of the present combinations, in which a very thin, dense membrane is placed in series with a porous substructure are durable and provide high rates with high selectivity. Such asymmetric membranes and the use thereof are within the scope of the present invention.

Examples of applications for porous membranes include: separation of fungal biomass in tertiary oil recovery; concentration of PVC latex dispersions; desalination of sea water; enhancement of catecholamine determination; removal of colloids from high purity deionized water; treatment of wool scouring liquids; filtration of tissue homogenates; separation of antigen from antigen-antibody couple in immunoassay; purification of subcutaneous tissue liquid extracts; concentration of solubilized proteins and other cellular products; cell debris removal; concentration of microbial suspensions (microbial harvesting); enzyme recovery; hemodialysis; removal of casein, fats and lactose from whey; concentration of albumen; separation of skimmed milk; clarification of liqueur, fruit juices, sugar, and corn syrup; alcohol fermentation; sterilization of liquids, e.g., beer, wine; continuous microfiltration of vinegar; concentration and demineralization of cheese, whey, soy whey, vegetable extracts, and flavorings; sugar waste recovery; silver recovery from photo rinses; dewatering of hazardous wastes; removal of hydrocarbon oils from waste water; recovery and recycling of sewage effluent; recovery of dye stuffs from textile mill wastes; recovery of starch and proteins from factory waste, wood pulp, and paper processing; separation of water and oil emulsions; separation of carbon dioxide and methane; and catalytic chemical reactions.

As described above porous membranes can be used in a wide variety of contacting systems. In a number of applications, the porous membrane provides one or more process functions including: filtration, separation, purification, recovery of one or more components, emulsion breaking, demisting, flocculation, resistance heating and chemical reaction (catalytic or non-catalytic), e.g., pollutant destruction to a non-hazardous form. The resistance heating and chemical reaction functions (applications) set forth herein can be combined with one or more other functions set forth herein for the porous membranes as well as such other related porous membrane applications.

The porous membrane, in particular the substrate, can be predominately organic or inorganic, with an inorganic substrate being suitable for demanding process environments. The porous organic-containing membranes often include a porous organic based polymer matrix material having incorporated therein a three dimensional tin oxide-containing material, preferably including an electronically conductive tin dioxide coating, more preferably incorporating a dopant and/or a catalytic species in an amount that provides the desired function, particularly electrical conductivity, without substantially deleteriously affecting the properties of the organic polymer matrix material. These modified polymer membranes are particularly useful in porous membrane and/or electromembrane and/or catalytic processes.

Examples of polymer materials useful in microporous membranes include cellulose esters, poly(vinyl chloride), high temperature aromatic polymers, polytetrafluoroethylene, polymers sold by E. I. DuPont Corporation under the trademark Nafion, polyethyelene, polypropylene, polystyrene, polyethylene, polycarbonate, nylon, silicone rubber, and asymmetric coated polysulfone fiber.

A very convenient application for the coating process and products of this invention is the production of a controlled coating, e.g., a thin coating of tin oxide-containing material, on an inorganic substrate, particularly a porous inorganic substrate, to produce a porous membrane. The process provides a new generation of membranes: porous membranes for contacting processes, e.g., as described herein. The selectively in filtration, particularly ultra and micro filtration, can also be enhanced by applying an electrical field and/or an electrical potential to the porous membrane. The electrical field and/or potential can be obtained using a two electrode electrical system, the membrane including a electronically conductive tin oxide-containing coating constituting one of the two electrodes (anode or cathode).

Porous multilayer asymmetric electronically conductive inorganic membranes, produced in accordance with this invention, are particularly advantageous for membrane applications. Among the advantages of such membranes are: stability at high temperature and/or at large pressure gradients, mechanical stability *reduced and even substantially no compaction of the membrane under pressure), stability against microbiological attack, chemical stability especially with organic solvents, steam sterilization at high temperatures, backflush cleaning at pressures of up to 25 atm, and stability in corrosive and oxidation environment.

A membrane can be classified as a function of the size of the particles, macromolecules and molecules separated. Micron sized porous ceramics for filtration processes can be prepared through sintering of appropriate materials as set forth herein for the manufacture of sensors. However, the preferred process for membrane-based micirofiltration, ultrafiltration and reverse osmosis is to provide inorganic layers with ultrafine pores and thickness small enough to obtain high flux through the membrane, particularly membranes including tin oxide-containing coatings.

With this type of asymmetric membrane, separation processes are pressure driven. Another factor is the interaction at the membrane interface between the porous material and the material to be processed. As noted above, selectivity can be enhanced by applying an electrical field onto the surface of the membrane. The electrical field is obtained using a two electrode electrical device; the conductive membrane constituting one of the two electrodes (anode or cathode--preferably anode). Such porous membranes can e obtained with one or more electronically conductive tin oxide-containing thin layers on a porous substrate. Conductive tin oxide combined with other metal oxide mixtures also provide improved properties for porous membranes and exhibit electronic conductivity, as well as other functions, such as catalysts or resistance heating.

As set forth above, porous membranes with inorganic materials can be obtained through powder agglomeration, the pores being the intergranular spaces. Conflicting requirements such as high flow rate and mechanical stability can be achieved using an asymmetric structure. Thus, an inorganic porous membrane is obtained by superimposing a thin microporous film, which has a separative function, over a thick microporous support. For example, conductive tin oxide coating onto the surface of filter media can be used as well as onto the surface of flat circular alumina plates. Coated alumina membranes supported on the inner part of sintered alumina tubes designed for industrial ultrafiltration processes can be used. Tube-shaped supports can be used with varying different chemical compositions, such as oxides, carbides, and clays. Coating of a homogeneous and microporous tin oxide-containing layer depends on surface homogeneity of the support and on adherence between the membrane and its support. Superior results can be obtained with particulate alumina. The inner part of the tube has a membrane comprising a layer, e.g., in the range of about 10 to about 20 microns thick, with pores, e.g., having diameters in the range of about 0.02 to about 0.2 microns sized for microfiltration purposes. The main feature of such a membrane is uniform surface homogeneity allowing for the tin oxide-containing coating to be very thin, e.g., less than about one micron in thickness.

The products of this invention as described herein, are particularly useful for resistance heating applications. It has been found that the coated three dimensional and/or flexible substrates particularly fibers, fiber rovings, chopped fibers, and fiber mats, can be incorporated into polymeric matrix materials, particularly thermoplastic, thermoset and rubber based polymeric materials, as describe herein. The tin oxide coated substrates can be, for example, E, C, S, or T glass, silica, silica alumina, silica alumina boria, silicon carbide or alumina fibers, rovings, mats, chopped mats, etc. What is unexpected is the improved mechanical properties, e.g., strength coating adhesion and the like, of the coated substrates relative to the prior art substrates coated using spray pyrolysis techniques and the improved control over coating thickness to match conductivity requirements for a given resistance heating application. Whereas for many low to moderate temperature applications, organic polymer matrix materials are preferred, three dimensional products comprising, preferably primarily comprising flexible or rigid inorganic substrates coated with tin oxide-containing coatings have excellent high temperature performance characteristics useful, for example, in high temperature resistance heating of liquids and gases, such as air, by contact with or through (i.e., porous) such three dimensional products. Typical resistance heating applications include: heating elements or units of electric heating devices, devices for culinary purposes, warming tables, therapeutic heaters, deicing devices such as electrically heated polymer composites, low-temperature ovens such as driers, high temperature heating of gases, liquids, etc.

A very useful application set forth above, is the heating of gases, particularly, the high temperature heating of gases. The heating of gases can include the direct and/or indirect heating of the gases, for example, the gases can be in direct or indirect heat exchange relationship with the heated tin oxide surface. In addition, the heated tin oxide surface can be in direct and/or indirect heat relationship with another surface which interacts with the gas to increase in temperature of the gases. For example, a gas such as an oxygen containing gas, i.e., air, can be contacted directly with the tin oxide coating on the substrate or a coating, such as a high thermal conductivity coating, which is in heat exchange relationship with the tin oxide coating, for example, another oxide coating, such as, alumina.

In addition to the direct and/or indirect heating of gases, particularly non-reactive gases and/or non-combustible gases, the products of this invention are particularly useful in heat exchange relationship with chemically reactive including combustible gases. In a typical application, the gas is heated (direct and/or indirect) to a temperature effective to initiate reaction and/or combustion of such gases which reaction if exothermic will produce heat thereby increasing the overall temperature of the gases and heated surfaces, particularly downstream surfaces. A particularly useful application of the above products is in the combustion of gases, particularly combustion converters including catalytic converters as described above under catalyst products and applications. In the various applications set forth above for the heating of gases, a particularly preferred substrate is a multi-cell/channel monolith, as set forth and described above. The multi-cell/channel monolith has excellent mechanical properties and is particularly useful for high gas velocity type applications, i.e, in the treatment of combustion gasses.

The use of a monolith substrate in the resistance heating of gases provides a unique synergy with the tin oxide coating, optionally containing a catalyst material. As set forth above, the porosity of a monolith can be controlled and increased and/or maximized as compared to the void free inorganic substrate material. The effect of increasing porosity is to reduce the thermal conductivity of the substrate which can reduce directionally the heat flow from the tin oxide coating. This is particularly important when gases are heated directly/indirectly and/or through combustion type reactions. It is preferred to reduce the thermal conductivity of the monolith substrate while still maintaining the mechanical properties required for the monolith in the particular heating application. In addition to reducing thermal conductivity by increasing the porosity of the substrate, the tin oxide coating can be coated with a coating having a higher thermal conductivity than the monolith substrate preferably a significantly higher thermal conductivity coating than the monolith substrate. Thus it is preferred to reduce and/or minimize the thermal conductivity between the monolith and the conductive tin oxide coating. In addition, it is preferred to increase and/or maximize the thermal conductivity of the outer surface of the tin oxide coating, i.e., not facing the monolith substrate, such as through the use of a thermal conductivity coating and/or by direct heat exchange relationship with the incoming gases and/or by the catalytic combustion of incoming reactive gasses. A particularly preferred coating for increasing thermal conductivity is alumina, particularly gamma alumina.

The reduction and/or minimizing of the thermal conductivity of the monolith substrate, particularly through control of porosity is particularly important when the monolith is combined with a catalyst material and such catalyst material is heated to temperature in order to promote an exothermic chemical reaction including the combustion of gases. For example, in the combustion of automotive exhaust gases, the incoming gases after the start of the internal combustion engine are at too low a temperature to be efficiently combusted over the catalyst. Typically, it may take from 2 to 3 minutes to obtain catalyst light off, defined as a 50% conversion of combustible gases to carbon dioxide and water. Such emissions resulting from the first three minutes of operation of a cold internal combustion engine can produce significant quantities of uncombusted carbon monoxide and hydrocarbons. Thus, the rapid heating of the tin oxide coating and the subsequent rapid heating of the catalyst material, can be done in a time to allow the heat directionally to be inputted to the catalyst material for initiating combustion or chemical reaction including the exhaust gases. The rate of heating of the tin oxide surface is in general a function of its conductivity or its reciprocal resistivity, voltage, applied current including the power factor and heat losses. As set forth above, it is preferred to reduce and/or minimize heat losses to the monolith substrate while directionally increasing and/or maximizing the heat flux to the gas and/or gas contacting surface and/or catalyst for initiating or continuing the exothermic chemical reaction including catalytic combustion type processes. The catalyst surface temperature is particularly important for initiating reaction, continuing the reaction and effectively utilizing the heats of combustion. In order to initiate a chemical reaction, particularly, a combustion reaction, such as in a catalytic convertor, it is preferred to have a surface and/or catalyst heat up rate which will allow for rapid initiation of the exothermic reaction. Typical heat up rates for tin oxide surfaces is from about 100° C. per second up to about 700° C. per second. Typically, a heat up rate of about 150° C. per second to about 450° C. per second will achieve a rapid catalyst and/or surface heat transfer to initiate chemical reactions including combustion. As set forth above, the heat up rates will be in part determined by the conductivity and other electrical components. Depending upon the application and the requirements of voltage, current and overall power requirements, the conductivity/resistivity of the tin oxide coating, can be controlled to design requirements. For example, the dopant level can be increased and/or decreased to obtain a design bulk conductivity. In addition, the thickness of the tin oxide coating can be varied and/or a degree of coating substrate interaction can be introduced into the coating design conductivity. In addition, other metal compounds, such as metal oxides, for example, copper, iron can be incorporated into the tin oxide coating to, for example, increase the resistivity of the coating for a particular application design requirement. In the case of the latter, it is preferred to have a uniform change in resistivity as opposed to the presence of insulating occlusions from the reaction of a component such as an oxide forming component with, for example, the tin oxide forming compound. As set forth above, it is preferred to reduce substantial deleterious interaction of substrate, coatings and catalyst which can adversely affect the design conductivity/resistivity for the particular heating application, including deleterious interactions that may affect the activity and/or activity maintenance of the resistively heated catalyst.

For heating applications where a catalyst material is associated with the tin oxide coated substrate, particularly for combustion applications, the tin oxide surface of the monolith can be electrically heated such as described above. When an applied potential across the monolith is used for resistance heating, typical and conventional contacts of the end surfaces of the monolith can be used, such as a metal coating on the monolith end surfaces by metal flame spraying. For automotive applications, the resistively heated catalysts of this invention can be configured or adapted for use in conventional catalyst canisters at the same or approximately the same dimensions used in conventional monolith automotive catalysts. The particularly unique features of the resistively heated catalyst, is the fast initiation of catalytic, reactions including combustion reaction when compared to the catalyst without being resistively heated.

Another very useful application for the products of this invention is for the joining of parts, particularly polymeric parts, and as a means for effecting the sintering or curing of parts, such as ceramics, curable polymers, for example thermoset and rubber based polymers and the like. The products can be incorporated directly into the polymer or ceramic and/or a carrier such as a cured or uncured polymer based carrier or other liquid, as for example in the form of a liquid, paste, hot melt, film and the like. These product/carrier based materials can be directly applied to parts to be joined and resistance heating particularly induction heating used to raise the temperature and bond the parts together at a joint such as through polymer melting and/or curing. A particular unexpected advantage is the improved mechanical properties, especially compared to metallic susceptors which may compromise mechanical properties. In addition, the products of this invention can be used in molding processes to preferentially allow the rapid heating and curing of polymeric resins, and/or to have a preferential distribution of the products at the surface of the parts for subsequent joining of parts. The particular form of the products, i.e., fibers, flakes, particles, mats or the like, is chosen based upon the particular requirements of the part and its application, with one or more of flakes, fibers and particles being preferred for joining or bonding parts. In general, it is preferred that the products of the invention have a largest dimension, for example the length of a fiber or side of a flake, of less than about 1/8 inch, more preferably less than about 1/64 inch and still more preferably less than about 1/128 inch. The concentration of such product or products in the product/carrier and/or mix is preferably less than about 50 weight %, more preferably less than about 20 weight %, and still more preferably less than about 10 weight %. A particularly useful concentration is that which provides the desired heating while minimizing the concentration of product in the final part.

Another unique application of the present invention combines the stability of the tin oxide containing coating, particularly at high temperatures and/or in demanding oxidizing environments, with the need to protect a structural element and/or to provide a fluid, i.e., gas and/or liquid, impervious material. Such structural elements are suitable for use at high temperatures, preferably greater than about 400° F., more preferably greater than about 1500° F. or even greater than about 2000° F. The present coatings preferably provide protection against oxidation. Examples of structural elements requiring such protection and/or a fluid impervious coating include three dimensional substantially carbon or inorganic materials, such as woven ceramic fibers and carbon-carbon composites, useful as turbine engine components, hot air frame components, and hypersonic vehicle structural elements or components. Due to the fact that carbon oxidizes under the demands of such environments, barrier or protective coatings are necessary. A particularly effective barrier coating is a tin oxide-containing coating formed according to the present invention because of the high temperature stability and excellent and complete coverage of such coating.

In addition, it is believed that a layer of at least one lower valence oxide of tin may form at the carbon tin oxide interface thereby giving additional barrier protection against excessive carbon oxidation to carbon oxides gases and decomposition products. The coating process of this invention, in addition, can uniformly coat three dimensional woven structures, particularly in the vaporous state, to effectively seal off diffusion of gases and/or liquids between surfaces. For example, ceramic fibers, such as those sold under the trademark Nextel by the 3M Company, can be woven into structures or structural elements, sealed off between surfaces, and used in high temperature applications. Such applications include gas and/or oil radiant and post combustion burner tubes, turbine engine components, and combustion chambers. For the latter, such structures can also contain one or more catalytically active materials that promote combustion, such as hydrocarbon combustions.

A particularly unique application that relies upon stable electronic conductivity and the physical durability of the products of this invention are dispersions of conductive material, such as powders, in fluids, e.g., water, hydrocarbons, e.g., mineral or synthetic oils, whereby an increase in viscosity, to even solidification, is obtained when an electrical field is applied to the system. These fluids are referred to as "field dependent" fluids which congeal and which can withstand forces of shear, tension and compression. These fluids revert to a liquid state when the electric field is turned off. Applications include dampening, e.g., shock absorbers, variable speed transmissions, clutch mechanisms, etc.

Certain of these and other aspects the present invention are set forth in the following description of the accompanying drawing.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

FIG. 1 is a block flow diagram illustrating a process for producing the present coated substrates.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

The following description specifically involves the coating of randomly oriented, woven mats of C-glass fibers. However, it should be noted that substantially the same process steps can be used to coat other substrate forms and/or materials.

A process system according to the present invention, shown generally at 10, includes a preheat section 12, a coating section 14, an equilibration section 16 and an oxidation/sintering section 18. Each of these sections is in fluid communication with the others. Preferably, each of these sections is a separate processing zone or section.

First gas curtain 20 and second gas curtain 22 provide inert gas, preferably nitrogen, at the points indicated, and, thereby effectively insure that preheat section 12, coating section 14 and equilibrium section 16 are maintained in a substantially inert environment. First exhaust 24 and second exhaust 26 are provided to allow vapors to exit or be vented from process system 10.

Randomly oriented woven mats of C-glass fibers from substrate source 28 Re fed to preheat section 12 where the mats are preheated up to a maximum of 375° C. for a time of 1 to 3 minutes at atmospheric pressure to reach thermal equilibrium. These mats are composed of from 8 micron to 35 micron diameter C- or T-glass randomly oriented or woven fibers. The mats are up to 42 inches wide and between 0.058 to 0.174 mil thick. The mats are fed to process system 10 at the rate of about 1 to 5 feet per minute so that the fiber weight through is about 0.141 to about 2.1 pounds per minute.

The preheated mats pass to the coating section 14 where the mats are contacted with an hydrous mixture of 70% to 95% by weight of stannous chloride and 5% to 30% by weight of stannous fluoride from raw material source 30. This contacting effects a coating of this mixture on the mats.

This contacting may occur in a number of different ways. For example, the SnCl₂ /SnF₂ mixture can be combined with nitrogen to form a vapor which is at a temperature of from about 25° C. to about 150° C. higher than the temperature of the mats in the coating section 14. As this vapor is brought into contact with the mats, the temperature differential between the mats and the vapor and the amount of the mixture in the vapor are such as to cause controlled amounts of SnCl₂ and SnF₂ to condense on and coat the mats.

Another approach is to apply the SnCl₂ /SnF₂ mixture in a molten form directly to the mats in an inert atmosphere. There are several alternatives for continuously applying the molten mixture to the mats. Obtaining substantially uniform distribution of the mixture on the mats ia a key objective. For example, the mats can be compressed between two fillers that are continuously coated with the molten mixture. Another option is to spray the molten mixture onto the mats. The fiber mats may also be dipped directly into the melt. The dipped fiber mats may be subjected to a compression roller step, a vertical lift step and/or a vacuum filtration step to remove excess molten mixture from the fiber mats.

An additional alternative is to apply the SnCl₂ /SnFn₂ in an organic solvent. The solvent is then evaporated, leaving a substantially uniform coating of SnCl₂ /SnF₂ on the fiber mats. The solvent needs to be substantially none-reactive (at the conditions of the present process) and provide for substantial solubility of SnCl₂ and SnF₂. For example, the dipping solution involved should preferably be at least about 0.1 molar in SnCl₂ / Substantially anhydrous solvents comprising acetonitrile, ethyl acetate, dimethyl sulfoxide, propylene carbonate and mixtures thereof are suitable. Stannous fluoride is often less soluble in organic solvents than is stannous chloride. One approach to overcoming this relative insolubility of SnF₂ is to introduce SnF₂ onto the fiber mats after the fiber mats are dipped into the SnCl₂ solution with organic solvent. Although the dopant may be introduced in the sintering section 18, it is preferred to incorporate the dopant in the coating section 14 or the equilibration section 16, more preferably the coating section 14.

Any part of process system 10 that is exposed to SnCl₂ and/or SnF₂ melt or vapor is preferably corrosion resistant, more preferably lined with inert refractory material.

In any event, the mats in the coating section 14 are at a temperature of up to about 375° C., and this section is operated at slightly less than atmospheric pressure. If the SnCl₂ /SnF₂ coating is applied as a molten melt between compression rollers, it is preferred that such compression rollers remain in contact with the fiber mats for about 0.1 to about 2 minutes, more preferably about 1 to about 2 minutes.

After the SnCl₂ /SnF₂ coating is applied to the fiber mats, the fiber mats are passed to the equilibration section 16. Here, the coated fiber mats are maintained, preferably at a higher temperature than in coating section 14, in a substantially inert atmosphere for a period of time, preferably up to about 10 minutes, to allow the coating to more uniformly distribute over the fibers. In addition, if the fluorine component is introduced onto the fiber mats separate from the stannous chloride, the time the coated fiber mats spend in the equilibration section 16 results in the dopant component becoming more uniformly dispersed or distributed throughout the stannous chloride coating. Further, it is preferred that any vapor and/or liquid which separate from the coated fiber mats in the equilibration section 16 be transferred back and used in the coating section 14. This preferred option, illustrated schematically in FIG. 1 by lines 32 (for the vapor) and 34 (for the liquid) increases the effective overall utilization of SnCl₂ and SnF₂ in the process so that losses of these components, as well as other materials such as solvents, are reduced.

The coated fiber mats are passed from the equilibration zone 16 into the sintering zone 18 where such fiber mats are contacted with an oxidizer, such as an oxygen-containing gas, from line 36. The oxidizer preferably comprises a mixture of air and water vapor. This mixture, which preferably includes about 1% to about 50%m more preferably about 15% to about 35%, by weight of water, is contacted with the coated fiber mats at atmospheric pressure at a temperature of about 400° C. to about 550° C. for up to about 10 minutes. Such contacting results in converting the coating on the fiber mats to a fluorine doped tin dioxide coating. The fluorine doped tin oxide coated fiber mats product, which exits sintering section 18 via line 38, has useful electric conductivity properties. This product preferably has a doped tin oxide coating having a thickness in the range of about 0.5 microns to about 1 micron, and is particularly useful as a component in a lead-acid battery. Preferably, the product is substantially free of metals contamination which is detrimental to electrical conductivity.

The present process provides substantial benefits. For example, the product obtained has a fluorine doped tin oxide coating which has useful properties, e.g., outstanding electrical and/or morphological properties. This product may be employed in a lead-acid battery or in combination with a metallic catalyst to promote chemical reactions, e.g., chemical reductions, or alone or in combination with a metallic sensing component to provide sensors, e.g., gas sensors. High utilization of stannous chloride and fluorine components is achieved. In addition, high coating deposition and product throughout rates are obtained. Moreover, relatively mild conditions are employed. For example, temperatures within sintering section 19 can be significantly less than 600° C. The product obtained has excellent stability and durability.

EXAMPLE 1

A substrate made of C-glass was contacted with a molten mixture containing 30 mol % SnF₂ and 70 mol % SnCl₂. This contacting occurred at 350° C. in an argon atmosphere at about atmospheric pressure and resulted in a coating containing SnCl₂ and SnF₂ being placed on the substrate.

This coated substrate was then heated to 375° C. and allowed to stand in an argon atmosphere at about atmospheric pressure for about 5 minutes. The coated substrate was then fired at 500° C. for 20 minutes using flowing, at the rate of one (1) liter per minute, water saturated air at about atmospheric pressure. This resulted in a substrate having a fluorine doped tin oxide coating with excellent electronic properties. For example, the volume resistivity of this material was determined to be 7.5×10⁻⁴ ohm-cm.

In the previously noted publication "Preparation of Thick Crystalline Films of Tin Oxide and Porous Glass Partially Filled with Tin Oxide," an attempt to produce antimony doped tin oxide films on a 96% silica glass substrate involving stannous chloride oxidation at anhydrous conditions resulted in a material having a volume resistivity of 1.5×10⁻⁷ ohm-cm.

The present methods and products, illustrated above, provide outstanding advantages. For example, the fluorine doped tin oxide coated substrate prepared in accordance with the present invention has improved, i.e., reduced, electronic resistivity, relative to substrates produced by prior methods.

EXAMPLE 2

Stannous chloride powder is applied to a 26 inches by 26 inch glass fiber non woven mat in the form of a powder (10 to 125 microns in average particle diameter)i shaken from a powder spreading apparatus positioned 2 to about 5 feet above the mat. An amount of stannous fluorine powder (10 to about 125 microns in average particle diameter) is added directly to the stannous chloride powder to provide fluoride dopant for the final tin oxide product. The preferred range to achieve low resistance tin oxide products is about 15% to about 20% by weight of stannous fluoride, based on the total weight of the powder. The powder-containing mat is placed into a coating furnace chamber at 350° C. and maintained at this temperature for approximately 20 minutes. During this tine a downflow of 9.0 liters per minute of nitrogen heated to 350° C. to 350° C. is maintained in the chamber.

In the coating chamber the stannous chloride powder melts and wicks along the fiber to from a uniform coating. In addition, a small cloud of stannous chloride vapor can form above the mat. This is due to a small refluxing action in which hot stannous chloride vapors rise slightly and are then forced back down into the mat for coating and distribution by the nitrogen downflow. This wicking and/or refluxing is believed to aid in the uniform distribution of stannous chloride in the coating chamber.

The mat is when moved into the oxidation chamber. The oxidation step occurs in a molecular oxygen-containing atmosphere at a temperature of 525° C. for a period of time of 10 to 20 minutes. The mat may be coated by this process more than once to achieve thicker coatings.

EXAMPLE 3

Example 2 is repeated except that the powder is applied to the mat using a powder sprayer which includes a canister for fluidizing the powder and provides for direct injection of the powder into a spray gun. The powder is then sprayed directly on the mat, resulting in a highly uniform powder distribution.

EXAMPLE 4

Example 2 is repeated except that the powder is applied to the mat by pulling the mat through a fluidized bed of the powder, which is an average particle diameter of about 5 to about 125 microns.

EXAMPLE 5 TO 7

Examples 2, 3 and 4 are repeated except that, prior to contacting with the powder, the mat is charged by passing electrostatically charged air over the mat. The powder particles are charged with an opposite charge to that of the mat. The use of oppositely charged mat and powder acts to assist or enhance the adherence of the powder to the mat.

EXAMPLES 8 TO 13

Examples 2 to 7 are repeated except that no stannous fluoride is included in the powder. Instead, hydrogen fluoride gas is included in the downflow nitrogen gas in the chamber. The preferred weight ratio of tin to fluoride fed to the chamber to achieve low resistance tin oxide products is in the range of about 0.05 to about 0.2.

In each of the Examples 2 to 17, the final coated mat includes an effectively fluoride doped in oxide-containing coating having a substantial degree of uniformity.

EXAMPLES 14-17

Examples 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 and 7 were repeated, except that a monolith having a cell density of 30 cells per centimeter squared, made from cordierite was substituted for the glass fabric. The monolith had a porosity of about 30%.

The above examples set forth the significant process advancements through the practice of the process of this invention. The following examples and processing results as set forth were obtained when a substrate mat of example 1 was substituted in state of the art equipment used for the processing of flat types of substrate, particularly flat glass.

EXAMPLE 18

A commercial spray pyrolysis process unit was used to compare the processing of a flat glass soda lime substrate with the processing of a non-woven porous mat of the type set forth in example 1. The spray pyrolysis unit had a process capability to coat a flat glass having a dimension of from 3 feet in width to 5 feet in length. In the unit a solution composition was atomized and sprayed directly at the surface. The temperature of the substrate was obtained by placing the substrate within an electrically heated furnace. The substrate was then removed from the furnace and immediately contacted with the atomized solution spray. The deposition parameters were as follows: temperature 500° C., gas delivery pressure solution 30 psi, compressed air 40-60 psi, spray configuration--round spray, vertical deposition, final coat distance--16" to 18", solution feed rate--5-20 ml per minute, spraying time 30-60 seconds. The spray solution contained 50% stannic chloride, deionized water, methanol and hydrofluoric acid (48 wt. %) in a ratio of about 1 to 1 to 1 to 0.1. The following results were obtained from the processing of a flat soda lime glass, and a non-woven C glass mat having a thickness of about 0.65", a dimension of 16"×16" and a bulk porosity of about 90%. Each substrate was processed according to the above conditions and after processing it was determined that the flat glass had a resistivity of 10 ohms per square while the C glass mat had no evidence of a coating. The process was repeated except that that mat was placed in front of the flat glass. After processing, there was no evidence of coating on the C glass mat. However, the backside flat glass had a conductive coating. Following the failure to coat the glass mat, using state of the art, spray pyrolysis technology, the process unit was modified by placing a 1" thick stainless steel plate on which to vertically mount the C glass mat. The mat after processing with the 1" stainless steel backing produced a resistivity of 600-800 ohms per square on the inner surface of the mat. The process unit was again modified to place mesh screens over the front of the mat, accompanied by bolting of the screens to the back of the stainless steel plate. The results of the combination of steel plate and mesh plate over the front of the mat was a mat conductivity of 5-6 ohms per square. However, the mesh plate obstructed the contact of the spray solution with the mesh underlying portions of the glass mat. In order to achieve a conductivity of 5-6 ohms per square, 20 coatings on both the front and back sides were required. The modifications made to the state of the art process unit, were not available in the prior art.

EXAMPLE 19

A horizontal continuous chemical vapor deposition (CVD) furnace manufactured by Watkins-Johnson was evaluated for the coating of the non-woven fabric of Example 1. The furnace is described in Circuits Manufacturing, October 1975. The furnace differs from the spray pyrolysis system of Example 18 by the continuous nature of the furnace and the use of vapor deposition of reactants. The furnace temperature could be profiled to reach approximately 560° C. and has been used to produce tin dioxide coated flat glass in one pass. The CVD furnace used tetramethyl tin, or stannic chloride as the vaporous tin source. The fluoride dopant source used with tetramethyl tin was trifluorobromo methane and with stannic chloride was hydrofluoric acid. The oxidant in the CVD furnace was a combination of water (vapor) and methanal. The non-woven mat used to evaluate the state of the art process equipment, was the same non-woven mat used in Examples 1 and 18. The process was evaluated using the highest temperature attainable in the oven using the slowest belt speed and at conditions to maximize reactant deposition and formation of a fluoride doped tin dioxide. A series of 25 process runs were made in the furnace and it was determined that essentially no deposition and coating was obtained on the non-woven mat. The same conditions with flat glass produced highly conductive tin dioxide coatings on soda lime glass.

EXAMPLE 20

An electrolysis tin oxide deposition method that had been used experimentally on flat surfaces was evaluated for coating non-woven mat of the type set forth in examples 1, 18 and 19. The method was based on the controlled homogenous precipitation of tin hydrate hydroxide from an aqueous solution of stannic chloride complexed with ammonium chloride. In the method, a catalyst (silver nitrate) is added in order to initiate precipitation. Precipitation begins when the substrate is immersed and the pH is brought up to 7.5 with sodium hydroxide. The results obtained when a non-woven fabric was utilized in the process were very low deposition rates, poor materials utilization, poor coating adhesion, poor fiber coating, i.e., clumps, poor continuity of the fiber, very low to zero dopant incorporation and a very high resistivity tin oxide.

The results set forth in examples 18, 19 and 20 demonstrate the difficult and substantial problems associated with the coating of shielded surfaces and/or 3-D type substrates. In examples 18 and 19, the substitution of a 3-dimensional, non-woven fabric for a flat glass substrate in units which are used to effectively coat flat glass were unsuccessful in their application to a 3-dimensional substrates and/or substrates with shielded surfaces. In addition, example 20 demonstrates the difficulty in processing 3-D substrates, i.e., very high resistivity and in addition, the difficult problem of incorporation of a dopant to provide enhanced electrical conductivity. A comparison between example 1 and examples 18, 19 and 20 demonstrate the unexpected, unique advantages and advances of the processes of this invention and the unique products for use in a wide variety of applications.

While this invention has been described with respect to various specific examples and embodiments, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited thereto and that it can be variously practiced within the scope of the following claims. 

What is claimed is:
 1. A process for producing an electrically conductive tin oxide coated inorganic three dimensional substrate having a catalyst material included therewith comprising:contacting an inorganic three dimensional substrate which includes external surfaces and shielded surfaces which are at least partially shielded by other portions of said substrate with a composition comprising a tin oxide forming compound at conditions effective to form a tin oxide forming compound coating on at least a portion of said substrate; including at least a portion of the shielded surfaces of said substrate; and forming a liquidous coating from said tin oxide forming compound on at least a portion of the three dimensions of said substrate including the shielded surfaces of said substrate under substantially nondeleterious conditions effective to do at least one of the following: (1) coat a larger portion of said substrate with said tin oxide forming compound coating; (2) distribute said tin oxide forming compound coating over said substrate; (3) make the tin oxide forming compound coating more uniform in thickness; and contacting said substrate having said liquidous tin oxide forming compound coating thereon with an oxidizing agent at conditions effective to convert the tin oxide forming compound to tin oxide and form a tin oxide coating on said substrate including the shielded surfaces and contacting said substrate with a catalyst material in or subsequent to any one of said contacting steps, converting steps and forming steps and recovering a substrate having a catalyst material included with said coated substrate.
 2. The process of claim 1 wherein said tin oxide forming compound is a tin chloride forming compound.
 3. The process of claim 2 wherein said tin oxide forming compound is stannous chloride.
 4. The process of claim 3 which further comprises contacting said substrate with a dopant forming component at conditions effective to form a dopant forming component containing coating on said substrate.
 5. The process of claim 4 wherein the dopant a is fluoride.
 6. The process of claim 1 wherein the tin oxide forming compound is in a powder form during the initial contacting of the inorganic three dimensional substrate.
 7. The process of claim 1 which further comprises contacting said substrate with a dopant forming component at conditions effective to form a dopant forming component containing coating on said substrate.
 8. The process of claim 7 wherein said substrate is in a form selected from the group consisting of spheres, extrudes, flakes, fibers, irregularly, shaped particles and multi-channel monoliths.
 9. The process of claim 8 wherein said substrate is a porous substrate.
 10. The process of claim 9 wherein said substrate is selected from the group consisting of spheres, extrudates, irregularly shaped particles and monoliths.
 11. The process of claim 10 wherein said catalyst material includes at least one metal selected from the group consisting of of gold, silver, copper, vanadium, chromium, tungsten, zinc, indium, antimony, the platinum group metals, iron, nickel manganese, cesium and titanium.
 12. The process of claim 11 wherein the metal is a platinum group metal.
 13. The process of claim 7 wherein said catalyst material includes at least one metal selected from the group consisting of gold, silver, copper, vanadium, chromium, tungsten, zinc, indium, antimony, the platinum group metals, iron, nickel manganese, cesium and titanium.
 14. The process of claim 7 wherein the dopant a is fluoride.
 15. The process of claim 1 wherein said substrate is in a form selected from the group consisting of spheres, extrudates, flakes, fibers, and multi-channel monoliths.
 16. The process of claim 15 wherein said substrate is a porous substrate.
 17. The process of claim 1 wherein the thickness of the tin oxide coating is in the range of about 0.1 micron to about 10 microns.
 18. The process of claim 1 wherein said catalyst material includes at least one metal selected from the group consisting of gold, silver, copper, vanadium, chromium, tungsten, zinc indium, antimony, the platinum group metals, iron, nickel manganese, cesium and titanium.
 19. A process for coating surfaces of an inorganic three dimensional substrate with electrically conductive tin oxide and having a catalyst material included therewith comprising: contacting an inorganic three dimensional substrate which includes external surfaces and shielded surfaces which are at least partially shielded by other portions of said substrate with a composition comprising a tin oxide precursor powder at conditions effective to form a coating containing tin oxide precursor on at least a portion of the substrate; forming a liquidous coating from said tin oxide precursor on at least a portion of said substrate including the shielded surfaces of said substrate at conditions effective to do at least one of the following: (1) coat a larger portion of said substrate with said coating; (2) distribute said coating over said substrate; and (3) make said coating more uniform in thickness; contacting said coated substrate with an oxidizing agent at conditions effective to convert said coating to tin oxide and form a a tin oxide coating on said substrate including the shielded surfaces and contacting said substrate with a catalyst material in or subsequent to any one of said contacting steps, converting steps and forming steps and recovering a substrate having a catalyst material included with said coated substrate.
 20. The process of claim 19 wherein said tin oxide precursor powder is stannous chloride.
 21. The process of claim 20 wherein said substrate is in a form selected from the group consisting of spheres, extrudes, flakes, fibers, and multi-channel monoliths.
 22. The process of claim 19 wherein any one or more of said contacting steps and said forming steps is conducted under at least one of powder and substrate being fluidized.
 23. The process of claim 19 wherein said substrate is in a form selected from the group consisting of spheres, extrudates, flakes, fibers, and multi-channel monoliths.
 24. The process of claim 19 wherein said substrate is a porous substrate.
 25. The process of claim 19 wherein the thickness of the tin oxide coating is in the range of 0.1 micron to about 10 microns.
 26. The process of claim 19 which further comprises contacting said substrate with a dopant forming component at conditions effective to form a dopant component containing coating on said substrate.
 27. The process of claim 26 wherein the dopant a is fluoride.
 28. The process of claim 26 wherein said catalyst material includes at least one metal selected from the group consisting of gold, silver, copper, vanadium, chromium, tungsten, zinc, indium, antimony, the platinum group metals, iron, nickel, manganese, cesium, and titanium.
 29. The process of claim 19 wherein said catalyst material includes at least one metal selected from the group consisting of gold, silver, copper, vanadium, chromium, tungsten, zinc, indium, antimony, the platinum group metals, iron, nickel, manganese, cesium, and titanium. 